Essay Topic Hub

Space
Essays

4,495+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

4,495 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Space?

Space as an academic topic spans a remarkable range of disciplines, from astrophysics and engineering to literature, architecture, urban studies, and social science. In science courses, it invites students to examine physical phenomena such as cosmic microwave background radiation, which offers evidence about the origins and structure of the universe. What makes space academically compelling is precisely this breadth: the concept operates simultaneously as a measurable physical reality and as a cultural, political, and philosophical construct, making it relevant across nearly every field of study.

The papers gathered here reflect that diversity of approach. Some take a scientific angle, analyzing phenomena like cosmic microwave background radiation to explore cosmological theory. Others approach space through literary or narrative lenses, such as analyzing how love, city, and space interact in short fiction, or examining philosophical arguments about spatial perception drawn from figures like Kant. Still others treat space in architectural or organizational terms, looking at how buildings, networks, and institutional structures occupy and shape physical and conceptual environments.

A strong essay on space begins by clearly defining which dimension of the concept it addresses — physical, social, literary, or otherwise — and commits to that definition throughout. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: empirical data for scientific arguments, close textual analysis for literary ones, or concrete case studies for policy and design claims. The most common pitfall is allowing the topic's breadth to blur the thesis; a focused argument about one aspect of space, developed with precision and supported by relevant evidence, will always outperform a survey that tries to cover too much ground.

4,495 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
St. Augustine and the Buddha a Comparison
Were St. Augustine and the Buddha to have a conversation, they might find their points-of-view quite interesting. Of course, Augustine might feel a bit inconvenienced by having to crouch down under a bodhi tree, but…
Research Paper Doctorate
19th Century Art First Question
Considered one of the most influential art movements of the twentieth century, Cubism defined not only a transformative period of art but influenced the careers of the individual artists who directed the movement as…
Research Paper Doctorate
Rising Health Care Costs -
Usually, when rising health care costs are discussed, it is the employees or the end users that are the ones caught up in the price. However, from an employer's point-of-view these costs can also be very problematic.
Research Paper Doctorate
The mechanism of storytelling
Human beings are naturally predisposed to hear, to remember, and to tell stories. The problem -- for teachers, parents, government leaders, friends, and computers -- is to have more interesting stories to tell.
Research Paper Doctorate
Controversy Over Zoos Most People
Most people have fond memories of going to the zoo as children to see the animals. Younger people probably remember clean places with no barred cages and some attempt at a natural setting for the animals.
Research Paper Doctorate
Social action: concepts and applications
Discuss the Factors that are at Play for Diaspora Groups Trying to Claim Permanent Urban Space.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Blindsight: What Accounts for Blindsight:
cortical preservation or subcortical routes?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Crisis Management Successfully Resolved Crisis
Successfully resolved crisis with the help of PR
Essay High School
Criminology Five Main Risk Factors for Criminal
Cohen, Kluegel, and Land in their article Social inequality and predatory criminal victimization: An exposition and test of a formal theory adopts the interpretation of five factors in association with criminal victimization risks. Guardianship has direct, proportional relationship to the income levels. The book notes that the presence of anomie state within the society is the main cause of crime. Cohen et al describe the main cause of crime as the social inequality within the community. Both articles (Social inequality and predatory criminal victimization: An exposition and test of a formal theory. Both articles view crime as a social problem facing the contemporary communities. The articles also have a similar view on the fact that crime society should face crime as a unit since it affects everyone in the context of the community.
Essay Doctorate
Special Education: Collaboration Between Teachers the Majority
Special Education: Collaboration Between Teachers