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Superstition
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Superstition sits at the intersection of psychology, philosophy, anthropology, and cultural studies, making it a compelling subject across a wide range of undergraduate courses. At its core, the topic asks how and why human beings form beliefs that persist without empirical support, and what those beliefs reveal about the relationship between reason and reality. Its academic interest lies partly in its universality — superstitious thinking appears across cultures and historical periods — and partly in the philosophical tension it creates between rational argument and lived experience. Courses in philosophy, sociology, and the humanities regularly prompt students to examine how belief systems are constructed and why certain ideas resist being removed even when challenged by evidence.

The papers archived under this topic take several recognizable approaches. Some are persuasive, building arguments for why superstitious belief should be taken seriously as a reflection of genuine human experience. Others are more analytical, using philosophical frameworks to probe the line between superstition and accepted cultural practice. A number of essays treat superstition as a case study in how past traditions shape present thinking, drawing on broader questions about how societies construct and maintain shared beliefs over time.

A strong essay on superstition begins with a clearly scoped thesis — arguing a specific position about belief, reality, or the social function of superstition rather than simply describing examples. Evidence drawn from philosophical reasoning, cultural analysis, or well-documented case studies carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating description with argument: cataloguing superstitions without connecting them to a larger claim about why they matter or what they reveal about human thought.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Enlightenment Thinkers: Galileo, Bacon, Descartes
Enlightenment Thinkers: Galileo, Bacon, Descartes and Newton revolution in human thought took place during the period of history called The Enlightenment. The great weakness of the old paradigm, religion, lay in it…
Research Paper Doctorate
Personal philosophy across different philosophers and scientists
My philosophy over different philosophers/scientists
Paper Undergraduate
Carolingian Renaissance Was a Period
Carolingian Renaissance was a period occurring in the late 8th and 9th centuries characterized by a revival in an interest in intellectual and culture development. The leadership of Carolingian rulers, Charlemagne and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethic and development
Ethics and Morality -- Ethics and Development
Research Paper Doctorate
Enlightenment concepts and historical significance
Philosophy: Enlightenment and Fahrenheit 451
Paper Masters
Hume and Experience in Morals, Politics, Religion
In morals, politics, religion and science, Hume was a conservative empiricist who emphatically rejected all theories he thought of as metaphysical or not based on actual experience and sense perceptions. He did not regard religious and metaphysical theories as scientific, but more like idle speculation, superstition and prejudice. No ultimate original principles existed outside of the mind and perceptions, and this certainly included the concept of cause and effect, which he insisted was derived from the senses and later processed through the mind in the form of simple and complex ideas. Nothing could be known about human nature or any other subject outside of an exact, empirical science, while innate and a priori ideas did not exist. Even his theories of mathematics, logic and the color spectrum were all based on empiricism, and the ability of the mind to reflect, compile and make connections based on repeated sense experiences. In short, he had no use for all the complex system building of the Continental European philosophers, although his rigid empiricism risked carrying him over to the opposite extreme and reaching peculiar conclusions, such as doubts about whether physical or mathematical laws were actually operating independent of the observer.
Research Paper Doctorate
American literature myth in the poetry of Allen Ginsberg: a Jungian analysis
Allen Ginsberg's epic poem Howel, is not only a personal statement of society, but also a classic poem full of illusions to mythology and psychology. It is a history lesson of the 1950s and 1060s, an era of chaotic…
Thesis Doctorate
Significance of Iconodules in Christianity
In history, the Christian religion has developed along various path ways. Currently, there are many different denominations and ideals relating to Christianity. While the basic belief in Christ unifies Christianity,…
Essay Doctorate
Healing Rituals Across Islam I Was Just
This paper starts from a microscopic view of one individual's experience and explodes that to describe struggles over the indigenous practice of healing and cleansing rituals that generate conflict in some of the largest states and international religions across the world. What Hawanatu Sessay describes helped her return from the most intense personal trauma to rejoin her community, shared by many, has been both suppressed by and incorporated into orthodox Islamic practice to form syncretic, hybridized popular cultures across the Muslim world. At the same time, such innovation encounters reaction from both the Islamic orthodoxy, as well as the states and institutions within which believers practice. This inquiry reveals both the diversity spanning Islamic practice across the Central Asiatic world, but also the commonality of traditions of extra-religious, shamanistic and localized ritual that often derives from pre-Islamic and diasporic origins, to amalgamate into indigenous Islamized hybrids that continue to evolve despite official oversight however that imposes itself.
Research Paper Doctorate
Europe and the world in global context
¶ … Enlightenment on the French and Haitian Revolutions