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Religious
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What is Religious?

Religion as an academic subject appears across disciplines including theology, sociology, history, cultural studies, and ethics. Courses in these fields ask students to examine how religious belief systems form, how they shape individual identity, and how they interact with political and social structures. The topic is intellectually broad, covering everything from the foundational texts and doctrines of specific traditions to the role religion plays in public life. Papers in this area may address established world religions, newer or syncretic movements such as Peyotism and Mormonism, or the intersection of faith with culture and power, as seen in work examining figures like Leopold Sedar Senghor.

The archived essays approach religion from several distinct angles. Some take a tradition-specific focus, examining the beliefs, history, and practices of a single faith or denomination, including Catholic education and basic theology. Others are comparative or cross-cultural, exploring how different faiths address shared human concerns. Ethical and applied angles appear as well, with papers connecting religious frameworks to biomedical ethics and ethical dilemmas. Some essays are more sociological, analyzing how religion functions within society or manifests in everyday cultural forms, including popular media and ceremonial contexts like weddings.

A strong essay on a religious topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond description toward analysis — explaining why a belief or practice matters, not just what it is. Evidence drawn from primary religious texts, historical context, or documented case studies carries more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating religion as a monolithic category; strong papers acknowledge internal diversity within any tradition and avoid overstating uniformity across communities or time periods.

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Spinoza as a Controversial Figure
Baruch Spinoza was from a Portuguese Jewish family, which had fled to the Netherlands.
Research Paper Doctorate
Attention Deficit Disorder or ADD
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder-ADHD is considered to be a general psychiatric problem occurring in childhood and frequently continue into the adulthood. (Szymanski; Zolotor, 114) the Attention Deficit…
Paper Undergraduate
Faith When Hans-Georg Gadamer Argues
This paper examines Hans-Georg Gadamer's conception of faith in order to determine the legitimacy of faith. Using David Hume's work on miracles as a guide, one can analyze Gadamer's claim in order to see if it holds up to scrutiny. Ultimately, it does not, because what Gadamer describes as faith, a "unique" phenomenon, is in reality merely a single flavor of the multifarious unfounded claims that can be found everywhere.
Paper Masters
Gran Torino Is a 2008
Gran Torino is a 2008 film, directed by, staring, and produced by Clint Eastwood. Eastwood remarked that this is his final acting role, and was a family project; his son Scott played Trey, and his son Kyle wrote the…
Paper Doctorate
Sexuality and Gender There Are Certain Patterns
This paper discusses works of literature from three distinct periods in British history. In the Medieval period, there is "The Faerie Queen." There is also Shakespeare's "Othello" from the Renaissance period and finally "The Country Wife" from the Restoration era. Each story discusses women and their sexuality and how it defies or affirms gender categorization.
Paper Doctorate
Moby Dick in Herman Melville\'s Moby Dick,
This paper is an examination of the character of Captain Ahab in Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick. Ahab's quest to find the white whale is described in terms of the inner trials and tribulations that he faces. The quest is described in almost religious terms, following Ahab's own characterization of his hunt for the whale as involving such issues as "worship" and "Fate".
Research Paper Doctorate
Chaucer\'s Canterbury Tales the Raucous
The raucous tales of the thirty-odd travelers to Canterbury disguise powerful social commentary as well as commentary on the medieval mindset. Each of the tales in Chaucer's work refers to a meaningful issue such as…
Paper Doctorate
Eyre End Towards an Appropriate
This paper contains an analysis of the last passage in Charlotte Bronte's novel "Jane Eyre," focusing on the role that the character of St. John plays in the novel as a whole as both a religious figure and a figure of British imperialism and colonialism, and why the novel would be concluded with news about St. John rather than with Jane's own story.
Research Paper Doctorate
Uncle Tom's Cabin
¶ … Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe [...] character of Simon Legree and his great cruelty toward the slaves he managed. Simon Legree is certainly the villain in this story about a gentle black slave and his…
Research Paper Doctorate
Jonathan Swift: life, works, and literary influence
Jonathan Swift was born in the year 1667 in Dublin, Ireland, the only son and the second child of his parents Jonathan Swift and Abigail Erick Swift. Since the father died even before the child Jonathan was born, he was…