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Pragmatism
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Pragmatism is a philosophical tradition that evaluates ideas, beliefs, and theories by their practical consequences and real-world usefulness rather than their correspondence to abstract absolutes. It appears most often in courses covering philosophy, ethics, education theory, and American intellectual history, where its distinctly American origins make it a recurring point of analysis. Students are drawn to the topic because it bridges abstract reasoning and lived experience, raising productive questions about how individuals and societies form beliefs, make decisions, and develop values. Its emphasis on the relationship between mind, nature, and action gives it wide applicability across disciplines.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a broad range of approaches. Comparative essays examine pragmatism alongside other traditions, such as contrasting the theories of David Hume and William James, or placing pragmatism within the wider landscape of analytic philosophy. Historical treatments trace how pragmatism shaped American education and the development of scientific method. Applied angles connect pragmatist thinking to ethics, personal philosophy, public leadership, and even classroom practice with ESL students. Some papers focus on individual thinkers like George Herbert Mead, using their frameworks to ground broader arguments about the self and society.

A strong essay on pragmatism needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simple definition and commits to a specific claim — about its strengths, limitations, or application to a particular context. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, historical development, or concrete case analysis all carry weight, depending on the approach. The most common pitfall is treating pragmatism as a vague synonym for practicality; a convincing essay engages its actual philosophical content, including how it understands truth, experience, and the role of the individual within society.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Ethical Behavior According to Mill,
Ethical Behavior According to Mill, Kant and Aristotle Morality is a difficult concept to pin down, appearing to us as a concrete term which is underscored by certain rational assumptions about the universe.
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 3 study materials and content overview
¶ … pragmatism and democratic policy. The main focus of the analysis is represented by key issues such as citizenship, representation and deliberative democracy.
Essay Doctorate
Vision of the Police Force in Aspects
¶ … vision of the police force in aspects of 'modernity' is that it is a replica of the nation-state enforcing a unitary body of law on a specific population; it is an objective institution expressing a universal truth…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Los Angeles: The Fiction Love
Love as a Commodity in the novels of Nathanael West and James Cain
Paper Undergraduate
Combating human trafficking of women and children
The problem of human trafficking, in general, and regarding women and children is a global human rights issue that has received considerable worldwide support for a number of years.
Research Paper Doctorate
Juan Bosch When Juan Bosch
When Juan Bosch died on November 1, 2001, Monegro wrote, "Juan Bosch, a former president whose influence in Dominican politics stretched across half a century despite his only seven months in office, died yesterday.
Essay Doctorate
Social Accounting Socio-Economic Accounting as a Term
Socio-economic accounting as a term and as a subdiscipline of accounting is a relatively new phenomenon. It is sometimes confused with social accounting, which is an established field of accounting and economics. Social accounting was first introduced by J. R. Hicks of Oxford University in The Social Framework: An Introduction to Economics, published in 1942. The accounting research of the time interpreted it as the whole system of accounts and balance sheets of a nation or a region, the price and quantity components of these accounts, and the various considerations to be derived there from. Social accounting was basically associated with national income accounting. An examination of the early publications in the accounting literature proves that point. A general theme in the early literature is the failure of the accountant to be involved in social accounting. The presence of business in initiatives implicating social accounting is so pervasive today that - parallel to what Monbiot (2001) observed to be a corporatization of the state - one can describe more recent developments in social accounting as the corporatization of social accounting. The manifestations of the ISEA and the GRI are here worth exploring.
Paper Doctorate
Chinese Internet Culture Decades After the Reforms
Decades after the reforms of Deng Xiaoping known as the "Four Modernizations," "a focus on development of agriculture, industry, science and technology and the military" (The University of Michigan.
Paper Doctorate
Composition board history, culture, and organizational foundations
Understanding the composition of your board and the history and culture of your organization, how would you go about laying the groundwork for the significant changes you believe need to be undertaken?
Essay Undergraduate
Quality improvement plan: data collection methods and implementation
Sound research and data collection are cornerstones to maintaining and improving our healthcare system. This is true even for the highest performing healthcare facilities. This is why the discussion here focuses on the Mayo Clinic, which must conduct research to stay always on the cutting edge. The research here discusses the data collection methods best suited for meeting its research needs.