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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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Paper Doctorate
Russian-u.S. Relations Surrounding Syria Today
The relationship between Russian-US and Syria in the recent past has not been on the right track owing to the insecurity that has escalated in the Asian Country. This study offers some views various scholars on the leadership style that must be adopted when addressing this issue. It is evident that a realist approach would paint a bad image on some faction and praise on the other side as shown in this study.
Research Paper Doctorate
Specific Technological Product and Ethics Related
Computer Technology, The Concorde Jet Liner, And Ethics
Paper Doctorate
Socratic analogies and arguments for the soul's immortality in Platonic dialogues
This paper covers two questions, both dealing with the book "Great Dialogues of Plato." In this book, Plato describes the speeches of Socrates in the time of his trial and then at his death. In the piece, Plato uses several metaphors to define and help illustrate Socrates theories on life, the human soul, and the potential for education.
Paper Doctorate
Project Management, Sustainability and Whole Lifecycle Thinking
Conversely, advocates of the "nurture" perspective believe that people are essentially blank slates, devoid of any preset programming inherited from their forbearers, who are shaped instead by the multitude of environmental factors which affect them from birth onward. In the case of Jamaican sprinting dominance, the nurture argument would claim that "any gene-centered explanation also dismisses the importance of a whole host of psycho-social and cultural factors that are likely to be major contributors to the success of Jamaican sprinters" (Kelland, 2012), including the prominence of short-distance sprinting in Jamaica and the country's substantial investment in training programs for promising young sprinters. This conception of identity also serves to explain one of history's more confounding conundrums, that of siblings, or even twins, who while sharing the same genetic makeup, end up following distinctly dissimilar paths through life. The nurture side of the debate was eloquently stated in 1973 by Ashley Monatgu, who stated in her book Man and Aggression that "man is man because he has no instincts, because everything he is and has become he has learned . . . from his culture, from the man-made part of the environment, from other human beings" (Montagu, 1973).
Essay Doctorate
Military Orders That May Be Unethical Utilitarianism
This paper discusses the philosophical theory of utilitarianism and how it is applied to military orders. When a soldier is ordered to do something which he or she finds morally objectionable then it creates a conflict. There are also dangers such as with Nazi Germany and other historic incidences where a refusal to apply individual ethics led to tragedy.
Research Paper Doctorate
Democracy Using Multiple Intelligences and Art
The project that this research is based on took place at Pantera Elementary School in Diamond Bar, California. The school population comprises approximately 200 students and twelve teachers.
Essay Doctorate
Character War Has Remained an Important Phenomenon
War has remained an important phenomenon used by the states to achieve their goals when the diplomacy failed. Previously, many philosophers has worked over war and defined it as a phenomenon that has a specific unpredictable nature. Similarly, they also provided us with certain principles, which are more often valid for most of the wars that have taken place so far. This paper discusses the campaign where the U.S military ignored certain principles, misjudged the character of it and faced losses in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Research Paper Doctorate
The existence of God
Many people go to churches, mosques, and synagogs each week to worship God and to pray. But does God hear those prayers? Does he exist? The debate over God's existence has gone on for centuries and is alive and well in…
Paper High School
What it Is to Be Human in Human Dignity
Fukuyama has called 'Factor X' the essential core of humanity: although there may be differences between persons in a society, there is a growing acknowledgement that we all possess a certain basic 'humanness' that elevates us above the animal kingdom. How logical is this concept, in light of what we have learned about humanity's location in the natural world and in relationship to the animal kingdom? This paper explores this question.
Research Paper Doctorate
Women and the Death Penalty
An Analysis of the Historical Effect of Gender and Race on the Application of the Death Penalty in the United States