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Selflessness
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Selflessness is the quality of prioritizing the needs and well-being of others above one's own interests, and it appears as a subject of serious inquiry across many academic disciplines. Students in philosophy courses examine it as a problem in ethics and metaphysics, questioning whether truly selfless action is even possible. Nursing and counseling programs treat it as a foundational professional value, asking how caregivers can sustain altruistic practice without personal harm. Religious studies and leadership courses approach it through frameworks like servant leadership and the moral teachings embedded in traditions such as Buddhism, Hinduism, and Christianity. Literary courses use texts like The Death of Ivan Ilych to probe how characters confront—or fail to embrace—lives lived for others.

The archived papers on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a comparative angle, setting figures like Mother Teresa alongside mythological archetypes such as the goddess Kali, or drawing parallels between Buddhist and Hindu concepts of the self. Others are applied and institutional, examining how selfless values shape ethical organizations, law enforcement codes of conduct, or leadership in occupational therapy and church communities. Narrative and literary analyses explore selflessness through personal storytelling or close reading of short fiction, while civic project reports ground the concept in real community action.

A strong essay on selflessness needs a focused thesis that moves beyond defining the term and instead argues a specific claim—whether selflessness is sustainable, culturally constructed, or practically achievable in a given context. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, professional ethics codes, religious texts, or literary examples all carry weight when carefully analyzed. The most common pitfall is treating selflessness as universally admirable without acknowledging the tensions it creates, such as burnout in caregiving or the erasure of personal identity.

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Paper Undergraduate
Professional portfolio development and presentation
I'm assuming that my teaching philosophy will change significantly throughout the next several years as I gain experience as an educator, and as I learn best through experience, I am assuming that many of the teaching…
Essay Masters
Beauty and Sadness in Japanese Literature
This paper is made up of two parts: the first part is a modernization of the story "An Account of a Ten Foot Square Hut" which describes a Japanese earthquake and its aftermath from a Buddhist perspective. The second part explains how the contemporary fiction reflects many of the concerns of the traditional work of Japanese literature written in the Pure Land tradition.
Paper Doctorate
Book report analysis and content summary
¶ … Howard's End," by E.M. Forster, is a story that uses people to represent the idealized positive and negative traits of the upper and lower class English in the early twentieth century.
Research Paper Doctorate
Data analysis methods and applications
¶ … classification system (codes, colors, categories, etc.) of themes or patterns based upon what appears to be most illuminative. What themes or patterns emerged from your notes? What are your main interpretations of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice
The Quest for a Meaningful Life in the Feast of All Saints
Essay Doctorate
Critical analysis of vehicle imagery and documentation
Leslie Bennetts (2007) vents her rage on the system that compels mothers to stay home and forgo career dreams and opportunities of higher wage in order to care for their children. She also seethes at women who turn their anger and embitterment inwards instead of directing it outwards at a callous and unjust system. I think that Bennetts (2007) has a point, but I also find her conclusions to be too categorical and it seems to me that she may be too generic in her fault-blaming. Ironically she herself may be evidencing the same fault that she accuses her targets of portraying, namely insufficient understanding and empathy of the other.
Research Paper Doctorate
The meaning of loss in Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls
It is a well-established fact that for Whom the Bell Tolls was based on Ernest Hemmingway's experiences as a foreign war correspondent during the Spanish Civil War. Although there are a great many war novels,…
Paper Doctorate
Overview of social psychology principles and key concepts
This paper examines the meaning of the Self from the perspective of social psychology. It defines terms such as self-concept, self-awareness, and self-efficacy, while also looking into the reasons individuals tend to be prejudice, obedient and conformist, and the reasons individuals adopt prosocial behavior--all in conjunction with developing the identity of Self
Research Paper Doctorate
Socrates, Some 2500 Years Ago,
¶ … Socrates, some 2500 years ago, the question of whether or not ethics can be taught or has limited application has raged on. Yet, a consensus that ethics does or does not have a place in business has never been…
Paper Masters
Disciplines and Cultural Context of the Humanities
The letter was a response to one he got from the white priests, who were encouraging him to go to the court with the issue of racial segregation. King had been imprisoned following a peaceful parade held in Birmingham, to raise a voice against racism. However, he was in violation of the court order that forbade any kind of demonstrations in Birmingham. It was penned in April, 1963 and was meant to fight for the freedom of all humans to protest peacefully against any injustice (Vox, L. 2012). Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a philosopher and a priest by profession but he is known for his work as the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.