Essay Topic Hub

Lying
Essays

1,151+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,151 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Lying is the deliberate act of conveying false information, and it sits at the intersection of ethics, philosophy, psychology, and political theory. Students across courses in moral philosophy, professional ethics, international relations, and even literary studies encounter lying as a subject worth serious examination. What makes it academically compelling is that it resists simple condemnation — the tension between honesty as a virtue and the practical realities of human life forces writers to engage with competing moral frameworks and real-world situations. Questions about whether lying is always wrong, when it may be morally accepted, and how it functions across different professional and cultural contexts give the topic genuine intellectual range.

The papers collected here approach lying from several distinct angles. Some take a directly ethical stance, weighing whether lying can ever be justified and examining specific situations where truth-telling conflicts with other values. Others apply this reasoning to formal contexts such as professional ethics and international relations, treating lying as a structural feature of negotiation, diplomacy, or institutional behavior. A critical literary approach also appears, as seen in work engaging with a defense of lies, where writers analyze and challenge arguments made in favor of deception.

A strong essay on lying requires a clearly scoped thesis that commits to a specific claim — for instance, that lying is permissible under defined conditions rather than universally wrong or universally acceptable. Evidence drawn from reasoned argument, ethical case analysis, and concrete situations tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the topic in vague moral generalities; grounding every claim in specific scenarios and logical reasoning keeps the argument precise and persuasive.

Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Les Demoiselles D\'avignon\" by Picasso,
Cubism was a movement developed between 1907 and 1914. It had its origins in France and its main exponents were Pablo Picasso, Georges Braques, and Juan Gris. Cubism treats the shapes of nature through geometric…
Research Paper Doctorate
Grandmother Gave Me the Little
¶ … grandmother gave me the little red cap for my eighth birthday. Everyonein the village said it looked very good on me so I wore it almost every day. In fact, I wore the hat so often, after a few weeks, people started…
Paper Undergraduate
1892 Borden Murders Lizzie Borden
Lizzie Borden took an axe And gave her mother forty whacks. When she saw what she had done, She gave her Father forty- one At one point or another, every schoolchild typically hears this small rhyme scheme, whether to accompany a hot-scotch match or as a joke towards the macabre. The Lizzie Borden case, however, was one of America's most famous trials – like the Salem Witch Trials, The Scopes ‘Monkey' Trial, and even O.J. Simpson. All of these become iconic, yet reflect somewhat of a mirror of society and American culture of the time. Looking at these trials, we can dissect some of the social mores and cultural trends of the time, learning much about society and the very real assumptions underlying the bias and dominant cultural schemes of the time. Of course, we have the trial transcripts – quite usually far less intriguing than the books, articles, and now movies about the subject. However, we also have the unconscious testimony – what is not said or what is said in certain ways that reflect the issues that are really in context (e.g. budding adolescents in a Puritanical society in Salem, etc.).
Paper Doctorate
Polygraph Testing Polygraphs Have Fascinated
Polygraphs have fascinated law enforcement members ever since they were first proposed, seemingly offering a silver bullet for uncovering dishonesty in suspects and possible law enforcement applicants, and it remains…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Memoir of a Missing Woman
The woman in the mirror returned my gaze. I recognize her deep blue Elizabeth Taylor eyes as my own, but the crow's feet, and that place just above the nose, between the brows where the hours of worry, concentration,…
Paper Undergraduate
Advanced nurse practitioner concepts and questions
¶ … tissue types that compose the epidermis. Name the tissue types that compose the dermis. List the major layers of the epidermis and dermis and briefly describe the individual functions of each layer.
Essay Doctorate
Innocence Project exonerations and outcomes
For nearly two decades, Robert Taylor had been imprisoned for a rape and murder he had insisted he did not commit. Then one day earlier this month, after DNA tests prompted Cook County prosecutors to ask a judge to throw out his conviction, officials handed him $13 for bus fare and he walked out of prison into a soft rain and the powerful embrace of his father. He had been set free.
Essay Doctorate
Artistic Technique as an Expression of the Modern World
This paper examines three different works of mid-20th century modern art: Jackson Pollock's White Light, Richard Hamilton's "Just What Is It that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing?" and Norman Rockwell's "Four Freedoms"--three very different works that all illustrate Pollock's view concerning the artist's mission to use unique technique.
Paper Doctorate
Spending Restrictions for Corporations Towards
Since the 1970's the overall issue of the influence of corporations, labor unions, political action committees, advocacy groups and 527 organizations have been facing increasing amounts of scrutiny.
Paper Undergraduate
The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Oppression, Repression, and Madness in "The Yellow Wallpaper"