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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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Research Paper Undergraduate
Wolfe, Charles and Kip Lornell.
Wolfe, Charles and Kip Lornell. (1992). The Life and Legend of Leadbelly. NY: Harper
Paper Undergraduate
Miss Julie and the Cinderella
The Swedish naturalist playwright August Strindberg's play Miss Julie has been described as a kind of Cinderella story in reverse, or an inversion of typical fairytale roles (Templeton 470).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Rousseau versus Locke: political philosophy comparison
John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau have both believed in promotion of reason as an essential factor in social contract theories yet their stance on early childhood education differ sharply.
Paper Undergraduate
Animal Liberation -- Peter Singer
Critic Peter Singer has written an in-depth review article about the book, Animals, Men and Morals, which very thoroughly covers the essays within the book and posits that there are some very serious questions about…
Paper Doctorate
Geniuses, History Will Never Even Be Aware
¶ … geniuses, history will never even be aware that most people even lived at all, much less that their lives had any real purpose, meaning or worth. All ideas of human equality and natural rights are just pious little…
Essay Doctorate
Transcultural nursing themes and patient care implications in Slumdog Millionaire
This paper analyzes Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire from the perspective of transcultural nursing. It shows how India is a diverse country with several different conflicting culture and looks at the various themes, characters, issues and cultural conflicts that the film depicts and assesses their effect on me and how they might be addressed in patient care.
Paper Masters
The existence of evil and the problem of God's existence
This essay examines the problem evil poses for the idea of an all-powerful, all-loving god, and concludes that this kind of god likely does not exist. Although the most popular conceptions of god view him as an all-powerful, all-knowing entity, the existence of evil makes this kind of god logically impossible. Even if one changes the definitions such that this god is logically possible, it remains extremely improbably due to a lack of evidence, and as such a belief in such a god is not reasonable or tenable.
Research Paper Doctorate
Death Penalty (Anti) Historically, Much
Historically, much of the debate over capital punishment has focused on the core moral issue of whether it is right to take a life as a punishment for murder. This moral debate is important and necessary, but because a…
Research Paper Doctorate
State standardized tests and cultural diversity, language, and disability representation
In order to determine the answer to that question, first standardized tests in general must be examined for their fairness to minorities, those with cultural diversity, limited English and disabilities.
Research Paper Doctorate
Virtue ethics: principles and philosophical foundations
Virtue-based vs. duty-based ethics: arguments and examples from Victor Hugo, Aristotle, Bernard Mayo, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and William Frankena