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Philosophy
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What is Philosophy?

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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Thesis Undergraduate
The history of the resurrection tradition
According to Merriam-Webster dictionary, the word 'resurrection' stands for "the state of one risen from the dead." Generally, resurrection refers to restoration to life of the person who is clinically dead.
Paper Undergraduate
Customer profitability and management strategies
What should RBC's strategy be for managing each market segment and why?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Students\' Access to Birth Control
Students' Access to Birth Control Services
Paper Doctorate
Religion: history, concepts, and cultural significance
Scientific creationists are different than creationists in that scientific creation is based on scientific evidence while creationists believe in creation as it is told in the Bible.
Research Paper Doctorate
America as a Multiethnic Society: Immigration and Multiculturalism
America is not a multinational society, but rather a multiethnic society. The result of this multiethnicalism has been the multicultural society in which we live. This multiculturalism has been a strength of our…
Thesis Undergraduate
Is There Such a Thing as a Justified Killing Is All Murder Morally Wrong?
This paper discuses the idea of justified killing and attempts to provide evidence concerning how it will always be morally wrong to murder a human being. The essay also relates to how society has made it possible for people to believe that it is normal for particular individuals to be killed in certain circumstances.
Essay Undergraduate
Australian Criminal Justice System
Overview of the Criminal Justice System: Fair and Effective - Penal Populism The Democracy at Work thesis proposes that politicians have been properly responsive to public concern about crime by putting into place the more robust responses to offending which people want. An alternative perspective is that politicians have been populist in advocating these tougher policies. "Penal populism"; a term equivalent to Bottoms's (1995) "populist punitiveness"; is defined here as a punishment policy developed primarily for its anticipated popularity. Penal policy is particularly susceptible to populism, because there is a great deal of public concern about crime, and low levels of public knowledge about sentencing practice, sentencing effectiveness, and sentencing equity. This combination of concern and lack of knowledge can present politicians with the temptation to promote policies which promote electoral advantage without doing much about crime. The more willful that such politicians are in their disregard of the evidence about effectiveness and equity, the more we are inclined to regard them as penal populists.
Paper Undergraduate
Balancing Humanistic and Solution-Focused Therapy Approaches
A well balanced therapist has a broad-based toolkit to help clients. They should have the expertise to combine the humanistic-existentialist and solution-focused approach in a more subtle way.
Paper Undergraduate
Christian Response to Philosophical Naturalism
Generally, philosophical naturalism is a worldview that suggests that the universe is a completely closed system that is strictly governed by physical laws and by mathematical constants that are definitively…
Paper Undergraduate
Roman Empire vs Han Dynasty: Military and Civilization Compared
Examination of the similarities behind the Roman Empire and the Han Dynasty patently reveals an abundance of differences between the two reigns. After all, both dynasties existed around the same time, during the turn…