Essay Topic Hub

Selfishness
Essays

472+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

472 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Selfishness, broadly understood as prioritizing one's own interests at the expense of others, appears across a wide range of academic disciplines, including psychology, ethics, literature, sociology, and counseling. Students encounter this topic in courses on abnormal psychology, family and relationship dynamics, military leadership, and moral philosophy. Its academic appeal lies in the tension it creates between self-interest and social obligation — a tension that touches nearly every domain of human behavior. Because selfishness intersects with concepts like motivation, control, and respect, it serves as a productive lens for examining both individual conduct and larger cultural or institutional patterns.

The papers archived here approach selfishness from notably varied angles. Some take a literary direction, analyzing the decline of the American Dream in works like The Great Gatsby or examining symbolism in poetry to trace self-interest as a thematic force. Others engage ethical frameworks directly, comparing moral systems to evaluate when self-motivated behavior crosses into harm. Additional papers apply psychological and counseling perspectives, exploring how selfishness manifests in family conflict, marriage dynamics, or abnormal behavior. Still others tackle social and political dimensions, connecting self-interest to issues of race, justice, and domestic leadership failures.

A strong essay on selfishness requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a general claim that selfishness is simply "bad." Effective evidence typically includes specific behavioral examples, theoretical frameworks from ethics or psychology, or close textual analysis drawn from literary sources. Writers should ground abstract claims in concrete, observable terms. The most common pitfall is conflating selfishness with self-interest broadly — careful definitions early in the essay prevent this confusion and give the argument a sharper, more credible foundation.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Decline of the American Dream
Scott Fitzgerald's novel, the Great Gatsby is a novel that reveals many things about human nature and the inclinations of the human spirit, namely the weakness of it as it becomes tempted with the promise of excess and…
Paper Doctorate
Literary analysis of "The Rocking Horse Winner" and "The Lottery
An Analysis of "Luck" in "The Lottery" and "The Rocking Horse Winner"
Paper Undergraduate
Female Ways of Identity Shaping
This ironic and even cryptic title of Buchi Emecheta's book is as far from the substance of her narrative as Africa is from Germany. What the book does convey with passion and realism is that motherhood in this African…
Paper Undergraduate
Happiness Principle,\' Developed by Utilitarian
¶ … Happiness Principle,' developed by Utilitarian philosophers including Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill states: "actions are right only insofar as they tend to produce the greatest balance of pleasure over pain…
Paper Doctorate
Divorce and single parent families
Whilst both Popenoe (1993) and McClanahan document and lament the decline of the ‘healthy family setting with Popenoe (1993) insisting that children are, consequently suffering from emotional and social needs and McClanahan correctly – according to some (but not all) studies – pointing to the repercussions of single parent homes that impact children's academic and vocational skills, amongst other factors, I think both authors may have some points but err in generalizing and adopting an undifferentiating and simplistic perspective.
Paper Undergraduate
Clinton vs. Obama: The 2008 Democratic Presidential Primary
2008 Democratic Presidential Primary -- Clinton vs. Obama
Essay Doctorate
Plato and John Stuart Mill Glaucon\'s Challenge
What if John Stuart Mill had to give a response to the challenge posed by Glaucon to Socrates at the start of Plato's Republic Book 2? Glaucon is inquiring whether justice is a good in itself or is an unpleasant activity promoted because it leads to good results, and offers the famous story of the Ring of Gyges. For JS Mill, there is no insistence on the Socratic idealization of actions being good intrinsically: rather Mill would concede to Glaucon the notion that actions are judged by results. According to Mill's Utilitarianism, it is impossible to imagine oneself existing outside society, and social existence requires behavior which promotes an idea of public good.
Paper Undergraduate
In-N-Out Burger: a behind-the-counter look at rule-breaking fast food
Does the fast food burger have a future? Concerns about obesity, sustainability, unfair labor practices, and homogenizing American tastes have been raised by such modern food classics as the documentary Supersize Me and…
Paper Doctorate
Prisoner\'s Dilemma and the Fight
Global warming reached alarming levels and governments from all over the world need to gather in a united front to fight the process. Sooner or later, all countries will be obliged to enter this fight, leaving all…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Successful Aging. What Do You
¶ … successful aging. What do you think are its positive and negative features?