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Philosophers
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Philosophers as a topic appears across disciplines including political science, ethics, social theory, and the history of ideas. Courses in philosophy, sociology, and the humanities regularly ask students to engage with foundational thinkers because their frameworks continue to shape how society understands justice, human nature, the individual, and the good life. The breadth of the subject is part of what makes it academically rich — a single concept like justice or the nature of the mind can be traced across radically different traditions and historical moments, from ancient Greek dialogues to Enlightenment political theory to Taoist texts like the Tao Te Ching.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on close reading and textual analysis, examining specific arguments such as Epicurus on the fear of death, the riddle of the Meno, or the concept of justice as it appears in the Republic, the Prince, and the Analects. Others are comparative, placing thinkers like Rousseau and Kant alongside each other to evaluate competing recommendations for reducing social conflict, or pairing figures like C. Wright Mills and Hannah Arendt to explore theories of mass society. A smaller set of papers applies philosophical frameworks to contemporary issues, including community reintegration and crisis intervention.

A strong essay on philosophers grounds its thesis in a clearly defined concept or argument rather than attempting to survey an entire thinker's work. Evidence drawn from primary texts carries the most weight, supported by careful interpretation rather than broad generalization. The most common pitfall is treating a philosopher's ideas as a fixed set of opinions rather than as arguments that require analysis, evaluation, and engagement with counterpositions.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Cognitive Development: Case of Anna and Jojo
Behaviors seen among children are largely affected by conditions surrounding their growth and development. Developmental theories postulated by Piaget and Sigmund have shown that children bred in violent backgrounds may have violent behaviors in their adulthood. The same also applies to those bred in fairly happy families as is the case of Anna and Jojo. This study has explored Piaget’s cognitive development theory and shown how emotional deregulation has affected the relationship between Anna and Jojo
Paper Doctorate
German Ideology by Karl Marx
This paper examines The German Ideology that was developed in 1846 by two philosophers i.e. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. The first section of the paper discusses the background or context that contributed to the introduction of the text on this ideology. The second part discusses the main concepts and themes in this ideology as expressed by the philosophers.
Research Paper Doctorate
Customer Relationship Management and Its Link to Sales Performance
The world of business has come a long way since the only maxim was "The customer is always right." One of the most important new versions of that age-old wisdom is the model of "customer relationship management" or CRM.
Research Paper Doctorate
Arts-Based Learning With Multiple Intelligences
Students are complex creatures, volatile, complicated and paradoxical. No two students learn alike, and no two students are the product of the same biological and cognitive processing mechanisms.
Research Paper Doctorate
Theology concepts and applications
¶ … Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. This invocation, accompanying the sign of the cross, marks the beginning and end of every Roman Catholic prayer. It has become synonymous with Catholicism -- a…
Paper Doctorate
Theoretical Applications in Sociology: Critical Theory vs.
Theoretical Applications in Sociology: Critical Theory vs. Systems Theory
Paper Undergraduate
Burns and Grove (2000) Explain That, \"Philosophical
This paper provides general philosophy of the nursing. It looks at development is the authors definitions of what the nursing practice entails. It reviews the author's value system providing personal insights of the intricacies of the practice as well as outlining personal values and their influence on the quality service.
Paper Doctorate
Lessons from The Making of a Quagmire: Afghanistan war strategy and counterterrorism
In his eerily prescient analysis of America's calamitous excursion into the jungles of Vietnam, entitled The Making of a Quagmire: America and Vietnam during the Kennedy Era, war correspondent and author David Halberstam demonstrates the inexorable influence of historic recurrence on modern events. Although only thirty years of age at the time of his reporting, Halberstam harnesses lessons learned through centuries of human conflict, focusing his penetrating perceptive skills on the defining event of his era: the Vietnam War. In doing so, Halberstam penned a devastating indictment of the American government's foreign policy, denouncing the military's overt displays of hubris and damning the entire endeavor with the derisive label quagmire; one which would forever after be used to describe futility in the realm of armed conflict.
Paper Undergraduate
Tok the Theory of Knowledge Suggests Four
The theory of knowledge suggests four ways of knowing: sense perception, reason, emotion, and language. Sense perception is the most important way of knowing in the traditional sciences because the scientific method is…
Paper Doctorate
The Meaning of Life: Religion, Philosophy, and Suffering
The meaning of life is explored in this five page paper. Philosophy, science, and religion are all addressed. Suffering, Andrea Yates, and Viktor Frankl are also addressed. The meaning of life is not found behind the magic curtain of Oz. Existentialism shows that the search for meaning can be a meaningless one that drives us crazy and that it is better to relax and enjoy.