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Theories
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What is Theories?

Theories form the backbone of academic inquiry across nearly every discipline, from psychology and sociology to economics and education. Students encounter theoretical frameworks in courses ranging from developmental psychology to management studies, where they are asked not just to describe a theory but to evaluate its explanatory power. Papers on this topic engage with frameworks such as Piaget's theory of cognitive development, Individual Psychology, Gestalt theory, Keynesian economics, and Marxism, as well as thinkers like Alfred Adler, Nancy Chodorow, and Judith Butler. What makes theories academically compelling is that they offer structured ways to interpret human behavior, social structures, and institutional processes — and they are always open to critique.

The papers collected here reflect a wide range of approaches. Many take a comparative angle, placing two or more theories side by side to highlight contrasting assumptions about individual development, cognition, or social identity. Others apply a single framework as a lens for analyzing a specific case, such as using sociological theory to examine group behavior or motivation theory to address workforce and management challenges. Some papers are more historical or expository, tracing a theory's origins and core principles before assessing its strengths and limitations in context.

A strong essay on theories needs a focused thesis that moves beyond summary toward genuine evaluation or application. Evidence drawn from primary theoretical texts, empirical studies, or well-chosen case examples carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating a theory as universally true rather than acknowledging its scope conditions — every theory has boundaries, and recognizing them demonstrates analytical maturity.

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Paper Doctorate
Graves disease: causes, symptoms, and treatment
This paper discusses the medical condition Grave's disease. This condition is caused by bonding of antibodies within the thyroid gland and hyperthyroidism. Although the cause is still not completely known, it is believed that heredity plays a large part in whether or not someone will get Grave's diseases. Treatments include medication, radiation, and surgery.
Paper Undergraduate
Crime Theory the Thirty Years
This essay is divided into four separate parts. Each segment attempts to investigate a particular crime theory. Specific, real world examples of the Weather Underground and the massacre at My Lai are used to help contextualize the argument. The essay ultimately argues that crime can not be boiled down to one single theory and that the particulars of a crime are complex and subjective in nature.
Paper Doctorate
Change project implementation and management strategies
Abstract The use of ecstasy amongst ravers has become a very distressing trend in the United States. Ecstasy is a synthetic psychoactive drug assigned the scientific term 3, 4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine. In view of the pervasive abuse of the drug, the primary objective of this study is to create a non-profit organization is to provide authentic, unbiased information highlighting the dangers of excessive consumption of ecstasy. As part of the study, a fictitious non-profit organization identified as Responsible Ravers will focus on reducing the number of people overdosing at raves by urging them to make better decisions and stay safe and healthy. Responsible Ravers enforces a new dynamic of change as espoused in Kotter and Cohen's The Heart of Change Real: Life Stories of How People Change Their Organizations. Kotter and Cohen refer to this model of change as the "see-feel-change" dynamic. The see-feel-change model stimulates action, sparking people's emotions by showing them persuasive reasons for change. This model of change draws from eight steps towards effective change.
Paper Doctorate
Gaining Insight Into System One
This is an essay on System One and Two (Kahneman). System One is the instinctive primitive system that compels biased subjective thinking. It is the type of thinking that is prejudicial and irrational but happens so fast and subconsciously that I am unaware of it. System One is the system that is unhelpful for researchers and is the type of thinking that we wish to avoid. Recognizing that my instinctive split-second decision making shares these characteristics will make me all the more conscientious of trying to avoid it. We have a tendency moreover to assert that we are not biased, non-prejudicial, and so forth. Awareness of this ripple of instinctive reaction that is hardly, if at all, registered by us can make us think otherwise. It may be, after all, that we are subjective and judgmental even without our realizing it. Knowledge of this dual system, can, consequently, help us in our research by making us less smug about our alleged objectivity and by making us more careful to be as objective as possible.
Research Paper Doctorate
Waste Water Runoff Inadequately Planned
Inadequately planned growth has been the cause of significant health concerns for America's beaches. In 2004, the Natural Resources Defense Council ordered 19,950 days of beach closures and pollution advisories.
Paper Doctorate
Separation anxiety in children and adolescents
Separation Anxiety and Separation Anxiety Disorder, also known as SAD, are an acute distress that first occurs in children beginning in the first six to eight months of life (Weiten, 2005).
Paper Masters
Construction of a Collective Memory Between Jewish
Assmann (2001) writes that sociologist Maurice Halbwachs and Aby Warburg, art historian developed two theories of "collective or social memory." (p.125) Assmann states of collective or social memory that the "…specific character that a person derives from belonging to a distinct society and culture is not seen to maintain itself for generations as a result of phylogenetic evolution, but rather as a result of socialization and customs." (2001, p.125) The cultural survival of this group or type of what Assmann refers to as a "pseudo-species" is stated to be a "function of cultural memory." (2001, p.125) This study examines the construction of a collective cultural memory in Turkey by present day Jewish and Islamic Turks.
Paper Undergraduate
Constructivist Theories of Learning
Constructivist and cognitive theories are both aimed towards creating a productive classroom environment in which knowledge is imparted in a manner to maximize retention and assure application. This paper aims to understand the underlying patterns of both teaching approaches and comparing and contrasting their basic assumptions, in order to test their resultant feasibility.
Essay Doctorate
Role of Prisons in the Society. I
In this paper, I have discussed the role of prisons in the society. I have included the theories of deterrence, rehabilitation, retribution, incapacitation, non-interventionism and restoration to support my discussion along with their positive and negative aspects. In the conclusion, I have given my preferred theory of imprisonment as the most effective and important ones.In this paper, I have discussed the role of prisons in the society. I have included the theories of deterrence, rehabilitation, retribution, incapacitation, non-interventionism and restoration to support my discussion along with their positive and negative aspects. In the conclusion, I have given my preferred theory of imprisonment as the most effective and important ones.
Paper Undergraduate
Psychology concepts and applications
This paper is about psychological theory and criminal behavior. According to the psychologists who support this biological theory, the development of the behavioral conduct of a person depends upon the biological effects on the brain. Due to various biological factors in the human body such as increase in blood flow, rise in testosterone levels, etc. They explain that the brain adapts these physical signals into determining the behavior the person has to present by converting these signals into phenomena such as emotions, attitudes, core concepts of self value and motives (Bartol & Bartol, 2007).