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Socrates
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Socrates stands as one of the most examined figures in Western intellectual history, and essays about him appear across philosophy, classics, and literature courses alike. Because Socrates left no writings of his own, students engage with him almost entirely through the dialogues of Plato — including the Republic, the Euthyphro, and the Apology — making the relationship between author and subject a live interpretive question. Central academic tensions include the nature of knowledge versus opinion, the teachability of virtue, the meaning of piety, and how reason governs a well-lived life. These themes connect Socrates to enduring questions about truth, existence, and the obligations philosophy places on those who pursue it.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays place Socrates alongside figures such as Buddha, Henry David Thoreau, Immanuel Kant, and St. Augustine to test his ideas across different traditions and historical moments. Close-reading essays work through specific passages — such as the stretch of the Republic from 475a to 480a — to analyze arguments about knowledge, opinion, and the philosopher's nature. Other papers address conceptual problems directly, asking whether virtue can be taught or how Glaucon's challenge reframes justice. Some writers bring psychoanalytic perspectives to bear, examining Socratic method through a Freudian lens.

A strong essay on Socrates anchors its thesis in a specific text or argument rather than making broad claims about "ancient philosophy" in general. Evidence drawn from Platonic dialogue — tracking how Socrates actually reasons through a problem — carries more weight than paraphrase alone. The most common pitfall is conflating Socrates's own views with Plato's, so careful writers acknowledge that distinction and account for it explicitly in their analysis.

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Plato The Republic
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Socrates in Plato and Aristophanes: Two Opposing Views
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Socrates and Euthyphro on piety and holiness
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Virtue and virtuous character in ethical philosophy
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Plato\'s Use of Multiple Layers
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Plato and Aristotle: philosophical comparison and contrast
The paper discusses the similarities and differences between Platonic and Aristotelian philosophies. Each section is divided into five segments: metaphysics, epistemology, anthropology, political philosophy, and political background. The paper has concluded that Plato's metaphysical ideas are derived mostly from the marriage of resolutions from his teachers. On the other hand, Aristotle does not only try to unify previous thought, but argues a differing set of ideas regarding metaphysics and the thinking being.
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Political Corruption and Anti-Corruption Laws: Hong Kong
This research paper has to do with the anti-corruption practices of the government of Hong Kong and how those practices compare to other nations in the world. Because Hong Kong is a special case principality in the word, they have many of the same features of a Western democracy. This report found that Hong Kong can be very favorably compared to these same governments in its fight against governmental corruption.
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Death in Venice Thomas Mann\'s
Thomas Mann's "Death in Venice" is often regarded by critics as being one of the most important short stories of the author's creation. In spite of his prolific literary heritage, this piece of writing caught the…