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Reincarnation
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Reincarnation is the belief that the soul or essential self survives physical death and is reborn into a new body, continuing a cycle of existence across multiple lifetimes. Students write about this topic most often in religious studies, philosophy, and world history courses, where it serves as a lens for understanding how different traditions conceptualize the soul, death, and moral consequence. The concept carries particular academic weight because it underpins foundational doctrines in Hinduism and Buddhism while also appearing, in varied forms, across a wide range of spiritual traditions. The Trimurti framework within Hinduism, for example, connects reincarnation to broader cosmological structures, giving students a rich theoretical architecture to analyze.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, setting Hindu and Buddhist understandings of reincarnation alongside one another or contrasting them with Abrahamic traditions such as Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. Historical and worldview analyses examine how reincarnation shapes broader belief systems and classical societies. Some papers move into literary analysis, tracing the concept of death, the soul, and rebirth through works like Toni Morrison's Beloved and other texts, while others focus on how longstanding Hindu traditions around reincarnation continue to influence modern cultural life.

A strong essay on reincarnation requires a focused thesis that goes beyond simply defining the term — it should argue how the concept functions within a specific tradition or text and why that matters. Evidence drawn from doctrinal sources, cultural practices, or literary representations tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating reincarnation as a single, uniform belief rather than acknowledging how significantly its meaning shifts across different religious and cultural contexts.

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Paper Undergraduate
Plato, a Platypus, and the Enlightenment
This paper examines the book "Plato and a Platypus Walk Into A Bar: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes" by Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein. The paper suggests that Cathcart and Klein are continuing in some basic intellectual trends of the Enlightenment, by modeling their book on the encyclopedic approach to ideas championed by Diderot in his "Encyclopedia", and the use of humor as a way to approach abstract ideas that was championed by Voltaire in "Candide".
Essay Doctorate
Goethe and Marlowe: Faust
A comparison of the endings of these two different handlings of the Faust legend by Goethe and Marlowe is used to illustrate crucial differences between not only Goethe’s and Marlowe’s differing literary ambitions, but also their different religious or spiritual worldviews. The paper offers close readings of the ending of each drama.
Paper Undergraduate
Dialogism and mockumentary in contemporary media
Shepherd,D.(2011). Dilaogism. Retrieved April 3,2014 from http://wikis.sub.uni-hamburg.de/lhn/index.php/Dialogism Jones M., (2003). Reception, Difference, and the 'Documentary-Collage'. Retrieved April 3, 2014 from http://www.uwo.ca/english/canadianpoetry/cpjrn/vol35/jaeger.htm
Thesis Undergraduate
Single-Payer vs. Private Solutions in Healthcare
There are two very entrenched camps in the universal health care debate as well as regarding what the federal role in healthcare should be. It is clear that the private and employer-based system is not serving the…
Thesis Masters
Wicca Native American Druid Healing
Nurse practitioners need to work with all types of people, from many different faith backgrounds. Generally, they are not expected to know the intimate details of any particular religion, but they should have a…
Essay Doctorate
Analyzing the Mind and Body Problem
Mind/Body Dualism: Compare/contrast Cartesian Rationalism and at least one version of Empiricism.
Paper Doctorate
Analyzing and Evaluating the Hell Debate
The debate over hell is a complex one, not so different than the multi-layered aspects of the matters of the Charismatic Gifts, Christology, Providence or the fate of the non-evangelized, etc.
Paper Doctorate
What Does Ligeia Represent for the Reader
That the narrator of "Ligeia" is one who is frequently called "unreliable" by critics is nothing new (Sweet, Blythe), as he is an admitted opium addict, often susceptible to hallucinations in which he would imagine the…
Essay Doctorate
Worldview From a Christian Spirituality Point of View
¶ … worldview is a "set of presuppositions (assumptions which may be true, partially true or entirely false)," ("Four Major Worldviews," n.d.). The presuppositions that form our personal worldview have a strong bearing…
Essay Doctorate
Body Count and Its Critical Analysis
¶ … Sanneh (2015) writes that Baltimore's crime statistics are complex: while killings have decreased in the several years since Coates' childhood, the population level of the city has also dropped.