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Nature
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What is Nature?

Nature as an academic topic appears across a wide range of disciplines, from biology and environmental science to literature, psychology, and philosophy. Students are asked to engage with it because it sits at the intersection of empirical inquiry and humanistic interpretation, making it productively complex. Questions about what is natural—whether in human behavior, literary settings, social structures, or biological systems—invite critical thinking that resists simple answers. The recurring tension between nature and nurture, for example, raises fundamental questions about identity, ability, and the role of environment in shaping individuals, which gives the topic lasting relevance across courses.

The papers collected here reflect a genuinely diverse range of approaches. Some take a comparative angle, setting texts or systems against one another—such as examining electric and hybrid cars versus gas-powered vehicles, or contrasting figures like Gilgamesh and the Monkey King. Others engage in literary analysis, exploring how nature functions in works like Jack London's "To Build a Fire" or Shakespeare's "Othello." Still others approach nature through a psychological or sociological lens, particularly in discussions of major depressive disorder, the nature versus nurture debate, and leadership behavior. Case-study and policy-oriented approaches also appear, touching on issues like the Oregon Death with Dignity Act.

A strong essay on nature begins with a clearly scoped thesis that specifies which dimension of nature is under examination—biological, environmental, thematic, or philosophical. Evidence carries the most weight when it is drawn directly from primary sources, empirical research, or close textual analysis rather than broad generalization. The most common pitfall is treating "nature" as self-explanatory; defining the term precisely within the essay's specific context is essential to maintaining a coherent argument throughout.

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Paper Doctorate
Althusser's Ideology and Gestalt Theory in Visual Communication
¶ … exemplify the importance of Louis Althusser's work on ideology and ideological state apparatuses to visual communication theory?
Research Paper Doctorate
Leadership Theories Applied to an Accounting Career Journey
Peter Northouse, in his newly released book Theory and Practice along with Lee Bolman and Terrence Deal in their also newly released book Reframing Organizations can help each one of us to understand the ways in which…
Research Paper Doctorate
Portfolio Assessment in Education: Methods and Best Practices
¶ … teaching profession in order to help students achieve various things.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Book of Job: Faith, Suffering, and the Hebrew God
Job's tale is one of the most accessible Biblical allegories. An honorable, just, pious man loses everything: his ten children, his wife, his entire estate, and on top of it all is inflicted with a horrendous skin…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ancient to Renaissance: Foundations of Western Civilization
¶ … Ancient, Early Church, Middle Ages, and Renaissance Civilizations to the Contemporary Western Civilization
Paper Undergraduate
Defining Terrorism: Legal, Political, and Organizational Analysis
¶ … hundreds of definitions of terrorism issued by scholars in different sciences and government agencies. There is no generally accepted definition for terrorism, although the international law is making use of a…
Paper Doctorate
Aquinas on Faith and Reason: The Five Ways of Knowing God
Thomas Aquinas has been understood to have reconciled faith and reason. Typically, he is understood as having provided justification for faith by means of proof, particularly, that the Five Ways prove the existence of God. Is the act of faith (i.e., one’s believing that God exists) compatible with reason? This essay answers this question using only a few of Aquinas's work included in On Politics and Ethics.
Paper Doctorate
Forensic Hypnosis: Uses and Reliability in Investigations
Before discussing hypnosis in investigation, it is important to understand what the term hypnosis means. American Psychological Association (1994) defines hypnosis as "an interaction between one person, the 'hypnotist',…
Research Paper Doctorate
Love as Action: Hooks, Peck, Jordan, and Sanchez on True Love
Modern America lacks a true love ethic. Writers like M. Scott Peck and Bell Hooks argue that our confusion about love stems from an inability to see love as an action rather than a noun, and the confusion of romance and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Theodore Roethke's "I Knew a Woman": A Dual Reading
Theodore Roethke was, above all, a great American poet -- planted solidly in the tradition of Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman. Indeed, much like Thoreau, Roethke seemed to have an ability, perhaps gleaned from his intense…