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Metaphysics
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Metaphysics is a foundational branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of existence, reality, truth, and knowledge. It appears across courses in philosophy, the history of ideas, and even science and nursing theory, since questions about what fundamentally exists shape how disciplines frame their core concepts. The topic is academically compelling because it pushes inquiry beyond what the senses can confirm, asking how reason alone can establish truths about the world. Figures such as Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Heidegger, St. Anselm, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche appear frequently in this conversation, and texts like Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics serve as direct entry points into debates about the limits of human understanding.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays set major thinkers against one another, such as examining Heidegger's ontology alongside St. Anselm's, or contrasting Kant's categorical imperative with Kierkegaard's conception of faith. Other papers adopt a problem-centered approach, focusing on debates between libertarianism and determinism or the relationship between metaphysics and psychology. Some writers apply metaphysical frameworks to specific figures like Aleister Crowley read through a Nietzschean lens, while others connect metaphysical theory to practical fields such as education philosophy or Jean Watson's theory of human caring.

A strong essay on metaphysics begins with a precise, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about "existence" or "reality." Evidence typically comes from close reading of primary philosophical texts, with logical analysis of how concepts like reason, knowledge, and experience are defined and defended. The most common pitfall is treating metaphysical positions as merely abstract opinion; grounding claims in the internal logic of a specific thinker's argument produces far more rigorous and convincing work.

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Paper Undergraduate
Assembling Culture Archives Documents Exhibitions
This paper looks at archival evidence collected over the past forty years regarding the beliefs of the people in the rural southern appalachian mountains. The archive examined had a gross amount of information so it was necessary to take just a small portion of it to write this paper. The beliefs encompass religion, ghost stories and other beliefs and how they were used to shape culture.
Research Paper Doctorate
Business ethics principles and applications
Maria Bailey clearly and blatantly misrepresented the size of her start-up business, but shrugged it off saying she knew what she was "capable of doing" and just wanted to show potential clients "what we were going to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Nation-Altering Event of the 1960S. Specifically it
¶ … nation-altering event of the 1960s. Specifically it will discuss man's first walk on the moon by astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldren, and how it stimulated the nation's growth, made an indelibly positive…
Paper Masters
William James\' Idea of Man\'s Religious Experience
William James' idea of man's religious experience is that man feels God or a spiritual presence in him and that this intuition alone - real as it feels – is the basis of evidence that a mystical something exists. Congruent to the utilitarianism of James' philosophy, he asserts the cash-value of such belief in that it helps the individual attain a more meaningful life and gives him certain direction and bliss. In this way, interaction with the Divine (or mystical feelings) whether ‘real or not that such presence exists – and it doesn't matter - are important and authentic since they contain instrumental value. Scientists of the time perceived people who had religious ‘experiences' as being, at best, in delirium; at worst, as delusional and insane. James argued that these instances were metaphysical, namely above and beyond physical experience, and could, consequently, not be measured by scientific criteria.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ancient philosophy: major schools and thinkers
Though it is acknowledged that the words and ideas of Socrates have been filtered though the thoughts of those that followed him, namely Plato, as Socrates wrote nothing himself, it is also clear that the interpretation…
Research Paper Doctorate
Poet T. S. Eliot
Eliot was born in Missouri in 1888. He studied philosophy and logic at various universities including Harvard. After graduating he spent a year at Sorbonne in Paris reading French literature.
Research Paper Doctorate
Overview of major nursing theorists and their contributions
Florence Nightingale was born in 1820 in Florence, Italy, the daughter of a wealthy landowner who was involved in the anti-slavery movement. He saw that she was educated in the classics as well as math and science.
Paper Doctorate
Hume's theory of causation and necessity
Philosopher David Hume, considered among the best philosophical writers in England, has a number of interesting explanations as to why causation isn't a necessary connection, and moreover, Hume has viewpoints on perception and how ideas and facts are related in a philosophical way. This materials is intellectually derived and the points made in this paper are based on Melchert's book and Hume's Treatise of Human Nature.
Paper Doctorate
Moral environment and ethical considerations
Ayn Rand's The Ethics of Emergencies speaks about the value of selfishness or self-interest. Although "selfishness" might seem negative at first, Rand's explanation makes quite a bit of sense.
Paper Undergraduate
Ethical Issues in Dentistry
Exposure to Radiation in dentist office is a major concern for parents with little children. While exposure of this kind can be harmful for anyone, its unregulated use in treatment of younger patients is especially alarming. In this article the author highlights the issue of unrelated radiation use in dental offices and one wonders if this is an ethical or business issue.