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Structuralism
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Structuralism is an intellectual framework concerned with how meaning arises not from isolated elements but from the relationships and differences between them within larger systems. It appears across multiple disciplines, making it a recurring subject in social science, psychology, literary studies, linguistics, and anthropology courses. Students engage with it because it offers a systematic way to analyze how knowledge, language, and culture are organized, and because its influence on later theoretical movements — including post-structuralism — makes it foundational to understanding modern humanistic and social inquiry. Thinkers such as Eliade and Lévi-Strauss, both named in student work on this topic, represent how structuralist thinking has been applied to mythology, religion, and cultural analysis.

The papers archived on this topic take a notably varied set of approaches. Comparative essays place structuralism alongside functionalism and behaviorism to trace distinctions in psychological theory, while historically oriented work traces its role in the evolution of cognitive psychology and sociological theory into the twenty-first century. Applied analyses examine structuralism through specific Greek myths, literary texts, and film, including post-structuralist extensions into cinema. Other papers use structuralist or related theoretical lenses to address identity construction, generational poverty, and representation in special education, demonstrating how broadly the framework can be deployed.

A strong essay on structuralism grounds its thesis in a clear account of what structures are being analyzed and what relationships within those structures produce meaning. Evidence drawn from specific texts, myths, films, or social phenomena tends to carry more weight than abstract summary alone. The most common pitfall is conflating structuralism with post-structuralism; distinguishing the two precisely, rather than treating them as interchangeable, signals genuine command of the theoretical terrain.

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Paper Undergraduate
Reflection paper on personal learning and experience
This paper discusses the philosophical and empirical foundations of influential schools of thought in psychology. It then explains the relevance of these schools to modern psychology. It concludes that the ideas of Behaviorism have been most influential in understanding why human beings, in general, act and react as they do in certain situations but were less effective in explaining the variations in behavior among different individuals. Gestalt psychology illuminated these variations by showing that each individual perceives his environment in a way that make sense to him. Psychoanalysis has been influential in understanding abnormal human behavior and Humanistic psychology for understanding ideal human behavior.
Paper Undergraduate
Cognitive psychology: fundamentals and contemporary applications
Cognitive psychology is stated to be "concerned with the advances in the study of memory, language processing, perception, problem solving and thinking" according to editor of the Journal of Cognitive Psychology, G.D.
Paper Undergraduate
Gestalt psychology: principles and applications
In general, Gestalt psychology -- founded by German scientists Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Kohler, Hermann Ebbinghaus and Kurt Koffka -- focuses on how humans perceive the world around them.
Paper Doctorate
Magwitch in Charles Dickens\' Great
¶ … Magwitch in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations
Essay Masters
Hermeneutics: definition, principles, and applications
Hermeneutics is the art of interpretation, closely taking apart a text, a discourse, or some other narrative in order to assess the underlying aspects to see what the author is ‘really' telling us, or what we can discover about his life. In general, hermeneutics is the study of theory and practice of interpretation. And then there are, at least, four sub fields: (a) traditional hermeneutics (including Biblical hermeneutics) that refers to interpretation of texts such as of religion, literature, or law. (b) Contemporary or modern hermeneutics that extends beyond the written text and refers also to all forms of communication such as philosophy of language and semiotics. (c) Philosophical hermeneutics refers to Gadamer's theory of hermeneutics, and, occasionally, to that of Paul Ricoeur's. (e) Finally, hermeneutic consistency represents analysis of texts for coherent explanation. This essay summarizes heremenetuics ,as wellas elaboratignon perspectives of Gadamer and Derrida.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Critique of postmodern philosophy in Thomas Kuhn's work
Philosophers over the course of history had been trying to find the answers to questions comprises of HOW, WHEN, WHO and WHAT. They apply these query terms to every phenomenon whether it is related to nature or human…
Paper Undergraduate
The philosophies embodied in Fernando Pessoa's heteronyms and identity
This paper examines and analyzes the works of Fernando Pessoa in terms of their relevance and relationship to modern philosophy. The life and works of this writer as well as their literary and philosophical significance are discussed in detail. The paper also discusses the question whether he was a great philosopher or an individual suffering from an identity crisis. The view taken in this regards is that he was an important writer who made an invaluable contribution to postmodern theory and literature.
Paper Undergraduate
Anthropology Historical Foundations of Anthropology
How do the methods of 19th Century Evolutionists explain the development of marriage, family, political organization, and religion?
Paper Undergraduate
Public service and competing ethical claims of public managers
Ethics is a philosophical concept that attempts to explain the moral organization within a given chronological time and cultural event. It is more concerned with understanding the way that ethnical ideas are presented,…
Paper Doctorate
Diversity of Psychology the Diverse
"Psychology is not about "getting rid" of symptoms. Unlike politics, and even unlike medicine, psychology is not about waging war or getting control of anything. Instead, it's about making peace with -- by listening to…