Essay Topic Hub

Philosophy
Essays

6,532+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

6,532 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

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.

6,532 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Motivation) the Success of Any
The success of any endeavor, either business or personal, depends on how motivated an individual is. The Fourth edition of the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language defined it as 'an inducement or…
Paper Doctorate
Liberating Philosophy: Perspectives on Hilde
Liberating Philosophy: Perspectives on Hilde Hein's View Pertaining To Spirituality And Gender
Essay Doctorate
Montessori School Advantages Why Would a Parent
Why would a parent send a child to a Montessori classroom? The answer to that question will be provided in this paper, because Montessori schools provide educational opportunities for children that are rarely if ever…
Essay Doctorate
Connections between economic growth, wealth, health, and happiness
Surveys have indicated that although citizens of the United Kingdom earn double the income they earned forty years ago, they find themselves less happy. There is no shortage of fables that support this story -- from…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Feminism: history, theory, and contemporary movements
Feminism: Participation of Women in Politics
Paper Undergraduate
Apple Computers the Company I
The company I have chosen to examine is Apple Computers. Apple characterizes its organizational culture as "fun, yet demanding." Apple was one of the pioneers of the "work hard, play hard" ethic now commonplace in the…
Paper Undergraduate
Non-Violent Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi
¶ … non-violent philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi is often called 'unrealistic,' despite its demonstrable success in liberating the nation of India from what was once the most powerful empire on the face of the earth.
Paper High School
Communication for Information System Technology
There is a rush of rules and regulations in the corporate and government institutions that administer the ethical behavior. Because of the growing numbers of rules and regulations and the strong dearth of progressive…
Essay Doctorate
Five major religions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, and Shinto
The concept of the self is examined in non-Western religious traditions. The Confucian self is defined in terms of its relation to the established social order. The Taoist self is defined in terms of "wu wei" or the path of least resistance. The Buddhist self is defined in terms of the necessity for escaping the cycle of samsara. And Hinduism and Shintoism are examined in terms of their similarity to Buddhist practice, while examining the Hindu concept of dharma and the Shinto conception of ritual practice and spiritual animism.
Paper Doctorate
Pedagogy -- Langston Hughes and Frederick Douglass
The situations of two protagonists who face a common dilemma—racial prejudice—are addressed by their clever and resilient use of education as lever of change. The constructs of critical pedagogy, structural violence, and cultural violence lend a framework to the analysis that is deepened by the socio-political perspectives. Critical pedagogy, in particular, is germane to the exploration of these two works by Hughes and Douglass, in that, what Freire has contended, he has also demonstrated. That is, education and literacy are platforms for changing social structure in so much as they enable people to alter their perspectives as dramatically as twisting a kaleidoscope.