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Mystery
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Mystery as an academic topic spans a surprisingly wide range of disciplines, from literature and psychology to history and economics. Students engage with it not as a genre label alone but as a conceptual lens — examining the unknown, the unexplained, and the ambiguous in human experience. Courses in literary analysis, social sciences, and history all invite writers to grapple with what resists easy understanding, whether that means the nature of individual behavior, hidden institutional forces, or unresolved events. The appeal lies in how mystery functions as both subject matter and method: the act of investigating something uncertain mirrors the analytical process itself.

The papers gathered here reflect a striking variety of approaches. Some take a literary direction, analyzing works like Bless Me Ultima and Bartleby the Scrivener for their layered, ambiguous meanings. Others pursue historical investigation, exploring figures and organizations such as Jimmy Hoffa and the Knights Templar where facts remain disputed or incomplete. Still others apply case-study and analytical frameworks to subjects like venture capital evaluation, child psychology, and the Vietnam War, treating complexity and uncertainty as problems to be systematically worked through rather than avoided.

A strong essay on mystery benefits from a focused thesis that commits to a specific claim about what is unknown and why it matters, rather than simply cataloguing unanswered questions. Evidence drawn from primary sources, peer-reviewed research, or closely read texts carries the most weight. The common pitfall to avoid is treating ambiguity as a conclusion — uncertainty should drive inquiry, not replace it.

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Paper Doctorate
Rene by Chateaubriand Overview of the Story
This story involves a young man who leaves Europe to emigrate in the U.S. early in the 18th Century, where he joins with the Natchez Indians. For a while he is reticent to explain to his Native American friends why he…
Research Paper Doctorate
Apocalypse the Word Apocalypse Comes
The word "apocalypse" comes from the Greek word "apocalupsis." This Greek word means "revealing, disclosure, to take off the cover." The Book of Revelations in the Bible is sometimes referred to as the "Apocalypse of…
Paper High School
Identity Is Comprised Not Only
One's identity is comprised not only of internal characteristics but also of external characteristics. One is a product of one's place and one's time in both the micro and macro scale. On the macro scale, one is formed by the geo-socio-political situation of one's particular time in history, the particular place on the globe that one happens to be situated, and one's larger society that one lives in. On a micro scale, one is influenced by all those details intimate to him: the family orbit surrounding him, the culture that he grew up in, the experiences that happened to him and so forth. Neuroscience, indeed, claims that one's brain is both 'embedded' and and 'embodied' and in this way finds it almost impossible – if not impossible – to escape one's surroundings. One's brain is 'embedded' in that one is socialized into certain ways of thinking. Although some drastically transform their lives, going opposite (sometimes) to their socialization, these developmental traces of socialization linger and impact the individual's perception and, consequently, action on many significant matters, most of them unobserved by him.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cigarette smoking: health effects and prevalence
Smoking is and has always been a fashionable and very destructive activity in the same time. Thousands of people die every day as a result of having smoked directly or passively, and, in spite of that, people continue…
Research Paper Doctorate
Enlightenment concepts and historical significance
Philosophy: Enlightenment and Fahrenheit 451
Research Paper Doctorate
Civic Festivals of Ancient Athens: An Overview
It is not without reason that October 19, 1987 is known as Black Monday. The day saw the biggest one-day decline in recorded stock market history in the United States as well as the rest of the world.
Paper Doctorate
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Honor and Respect: the Ends of Iliad and Lysistrata
Research Paper Doctorate
American literature myth in the poetry of Allen Ginsberg: a Jungian analysis
Allen Ginsberg's epic poem Howel, is not only a personal statement of society, but also a classic poem full of illusions to mythology and psychology. It is a history lesson of the 1950s and 1060s, an era of chaotic…
Research Paper Doctorate
Frank Churchill in Jane Austen\'s Emma
Emma: The Character of Frank Churchill and 'reading' the moral qualities of men in Jane Austen
Paper Undergraduate
The impact of science on religion and reciprocal influences
I chose to use the relationship between religion and science across time as a topic for my paper because of the complexity that this discussion puts across. It is certainly interesting to observe religious and scientific ideas being intertwined in the contemporary society in spite of the fact that people in the past held great reservations with regard to ideas expressed by each domain individually. To a certain degree, it is only safe to say that science and religion have complemented each-other in many situations. When people could no longer explain phenomena through science, some resorted to using religion as a means to explain them.