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Philosophy as an academic subject invites students to examine the foundations of knowledge, existence, ethics, and reasoning. It appears across a wide range of courses, from introductory humanities seminars to specialized studies in ethics, political theory, and the history of ideas. What makes it academically compelling is its demand for rigorous argumentation about questions that resist simple answers — how to live, what can be known, and how society should be organized. Works and figures such as Plato's Republic, the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and frameworks drawn from virtue ethics all surface as reference points, reflecting how philosophical inquiry reaches across literature, science, theology, and political thought.

Student papers on this topic take a notably diverse range of approaches. Some engage in direct textual analysis, examining arguments in works like Plato's Republic or Eugene O'Neill's The Hairy Ape. Others apply philosophical frameworks to contemporary concerns, including environmental ethical issues and critical feminist theory, or explore the intersection of philosophy with psychology through approaches like Gestalt therapy. Comparative essays weighing concepts such as virtue versus knowledge, or utilitarian principles like the needs of the many outweighing the needs of the few, are also common. Religious and worldview-based perspectives frequently appear alongside secular philosophical traditions.

A strong philosophical essay establishes a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply summarizing ideas. Evidence typically comes from close reading of primary texts and logical analysis of competing positions. The most common pitfall is writing at too broad a level — strong essays narrow their focus to a specific claim about reason, existence, or ethical life and defend it with sustained, careful argument.

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Paper Doctorate
Good Life Philosophers and Indeed
Philosophers and indeed most curious members of the lay have long been concerned with one topic, so much so that it has become cliche and even trite in many contexts. The quest for the meaning of life, though it has…
Paper Undergraduate
Kierkegaard on Camus Albert Camus\'s
Albert Camus's the Stranger, though a novel on the surface, can also be read as a philosophical treatise of sorts. Its depiction of Mersault, the indifferent and apparently passionless man who doesn't cry at his mother'…
Paper Undergraduate
UN Peacekeeping Limitations After Five
After five decades of international conflict, waged between the imperial champion of the communist ideology and the frontrunner for western democracy, the latter prevailed in the peaceful revolution of 1989.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Pippa Passes Robert Browning\'s Lengthy
Robert Browning's lengthy poem "Pippa Passes" is in some ways a precursor to his characteristic dramatic monologues. "Pippa Passes" is a much longer work than those monologues, though it has the same dramatic sense and…
Paper Undergraduate
Incapacity of the Human Society
¶ … incapacity of the human society to blend and properly integrate the two main approaches that are used in describing both the reality around, the birth of the Universe and the scope and purpose of mankind on the Earth.
Paper Undergraduate
Dignity of human life in Humanae Vitae
In the modern history of Catholicism, one of the most controversial and argued pronouncement from any contemporary Pope was the encyclical, issued by Pope Paul VI in 1968, entitled Humanae Vitae.
Paper High School
The Scientific Revolution: Planets, Faith, and Western Thought
This paper is actually three separate papers that all focus on issues in a Richard Tarnas book on the passion of the Western mind. They address the Scientific Revolution, as well as the early Church and how it was affected by scientific changes. In addition, the papers also provide information on the problem of the planets.
Paper Undergraduate
Eric Fischl\'s Works Eric Fischl:
Eric Fischl was born in New York City in 1948 and grew up on suburban Long Island. His family moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1967. He completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in…
Paper Doctorate
The impact of religion on the elderly
Public health emergency preparedness and response.
Paper Undergraduate
Natural experiments are infeasible in educational research
The Impossibility of "Natural" or "Real" Experiments in the Filed of Education: A Philosophical Examination