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Philosophy
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Philosophy is one of the oldest academic disciplines, concerned with foundational questions about knowledge, existence, morality, and the nature of society. It appears across a wide range of courses, from introductory humanities surveys to professional programs in nursing and education, precisely because its core concerns—how we know what we know, what we value, and how we ought to act—cut across disciplinary boundaries. Works like Traversing Philosophical Boundaries by Max O'Halloran represent the kind of textbook framework students encounter when first engaging systematic philosophical inquiry, and topics such as free will and philosophy of religion show how abstract concepts quickly connect to lived experience.

The papers gathered here reflect several distinct approaches. Many are personal and reflective, asking writers to articulate their own philosophy of education, leisure, or professional practice—particularly within nursing and teaching contexts. Others take a more analytical or expository angle, examining concepts like free will or engaging with religion through formats such as podcast responses. Some papers address applied social questions, including juvenile corrections and the inclusion of students with visual impairments, showing how philosophical frameworks inform policy and practice debates.

A strong philosophy essay begins with a clearly scoped thesis that stakes out a defined position or interpretive claim rather than simply summarizing ideas. Evidence drawn from personal experience, course readings, or real-world examples tends to carry weight when it is used to support a reasoned argument. The most common pitfall is writing too broadly—treating "philosophy" as an open invitation to discuss everything at once rather than focusing on one coherent question or concept and developing it with precision and depth.

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Paper Doctorate
Benefits and limitations of animated characters in contemporary advertising
The History of Animated Characters in Advertisement
Research Paper Undergraduate
An empirical study of CPAs moral development and ethical decision making
As a result of such public accounting scandals involving the world's largest public accounting firm, Arthur Anderson, and its unethical mishandling of such corporate accounts as Enron, WorldCom, Merck and Xerox, the…
Paper Undergraduate
Obama and McCain's approaches to economy, taxes, and Iraq
John McCain and Barack Obama both have sophisticated strategies to deal with the struggling economy. The McCain policy is based on old-school Republican economics. For example, the McCain plan calls for the lowering of…
Paper Undergraduate
Food Prices Over the Past
¶ … food prices over the past few years has been the result of several factors. Supply tightness increases volatility, so the high prices of the past few years indicate significant supply tightness in key variables.
Paper Undergraduate
Arguments for the necessary existence of God
The necessary existence of God implies that God must in fact be infinite, perfect, omniscient and timeless. According to the theory of necessary existence, being is itself a divine quality.
Paper Undergraduate
UNIX Is, Likely, the Oldest
UNIX is, likely, the oldest operating system still in widespread use today, and still containing bits of code and philosophy generated sometime in the 1970s by predecessors of the Free Software Movement.
Paper Undergraduate
Southwest Airlines business model and operations
Southwest's emphasis on corporate culture as a source of competitive advantage derives from its philosophy that the employees are the most important driver of success at the airline.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethnicity, Culture or Counseling Diveristy
Ethnicity, culture, or counseling diversity: Cultural diversity and Children
Paper High School
Hacktivism and tensions in American culture
Those who are seen by society as generally incompetent are likely to take full advantage of whatever realm they can gain a sense of competence and even mastery in. Hackers came from the ranks of the disenfranchised, although they were not disenfranchised in the ways that that term has generally been applied. They were not disenfranchised by virtue of race or gender or age or class or any other demographic quality. Rather they were disenfranchised simply because they could not fit in. This gave them a natural alliance with others who could not fit in to whatever society they lived in and for whatever reason. When hacking became hacktivism, this empathy for the underdog would often translate into empathy for human rights activists in repressive regimes.
Research Paper Undergraduate
World religions: history, beliefs, and practices
World Religions: Orthodox Christianity and Universalism Compared