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Theorists
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Theorists as a subject of academic study appears across nearly every discipline, from psychology and political science to anthropology, management, and public administration. Students are asked to engage with theorists not simply to summarize their ideas but to evaluate how those ideas were constructed, what assumptions they rest on, and how they hold up against evidence or competing frameworks. The breadth of this topic reflects a core academic skill: understanding that knowledge is produced by specific thinkers working within historical and intellectual contexts, and that those thinkers can be questioned, compared, and built upon.

The papers archived here take a wide range of approaches. Comparative analysis is especially common, with writers placing theorists side by side to highlight agreements, contradictions, or gaps — as seen in work on personality theories, anti-federalist theorists, and public administration thinkers. Other papers take a discipline-specific focus, examining theorists within psychology, anthropology, humor studies, entrepreneurship, and organizational behavior. Some essays ground theoretical discussion in concrete policy contexts, including labor, alternative dispute resolution, and workplace issues like the glass ceiling, using theory as a lens to interpret real-world cases.

A strong essay on theorists requires a clearly bounded thesis — rather than surveying every idea a thinker produced, focus on a specific claim, contribution, or debate. Evidence should come from primary theoretical texts where possible, supported by scholarly critique. The most common pitfall is treating a theorist's ideas as fixed truths rather than as arguments to be assessed. Engaging critically, acknowledging limitations and historical context, consistently produces more persuasive and analytically rigorous work.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Anthropology Behavioral Implications of Developmental
Behavioral Implications of Developmental Changes in Human Past
Essay Doctorate
Sufficient Reason (Psr) Advocate Cosmological Argument Justify
The Principle of Sufficient Reason as developed by theorists and philosophers points out that for every event, existence, occurrence, if that event or occurrence took place and is real, they there must be a reason and proof for that occurrence to be real. More precisely, the theory appeals to the need to explain and justify different events in history that in fact took place and therefore there must be sufficient explanation for why such an event or logic took place or is real.
Thesis Undergraduate
Control mechanisms in organizational systems
Control Mechanism: Advance Financial Management
Research Paper Doctorate
Education: Rousseau Jean Jacques Rousseau
Jean Jacques Rousseau until very recently was considered one of the most well-known education theorists who chose law and will over nature as means of instill the best knowledge and most useful information in a child's…
Paper Doctorate
Laws and Marriage Legal Marriage
Legal marriage reform is essential to the social advancement of historically oppressed groups such as African-Americans, women, the lgbt community, religious minorities -- Mormons and Muslims.
Paper Doctorate
James vs. Nussbaum: Theories of Emotion in Philosophy of Mind
this is a paper on philosophy and particularly looks at Philosophy of mind: Emotions. Centrally discussed here are the arguments by Martha Nussbaum and those of William James. The main arguments for both philosophers are highlighted then the similarities as well as the differences in their arguments are highlighted too
Research Paper Doctorate
Obsessive compulsive disorder: symptoms, causes, and treatment
¶ … dysfunctional behavior that strikes 1 out of 40 or 50 adults and 1 out of 100 children or 2-3% of any population. It can begin at any age, although most commonly in adolescence or early adulthood - from ages 6 to 15…
Research Paper Doctorate
History of Crime and Punishment in Europe 17c 18c
This paper traces the history crime and punishment in Europe. It looks at the influences of that time the social and philosophical movements and how they affected the whole evolution of treatment of crime and the…
Essay Undergraduate
Theories and theorists: an overview of major contributions
This paper compares two theorists prominent in the field of criminal justice: that of Howard Becker and Robert Agnew. Becker was an advocate of social labeling theory; Agnew an advocate of social strain theory. The two criminologist's viewpoints are compared and contrasted over the course of the essay and the conclusion discusses the implications for social policy dealing with crime.
Paper Undergraduate
Economic, Class and Morality Economics,
The world is confronting innumerable problems since the time humans have first walked on planet Earth; however, with the passage of time, these problems are intensifying and posing a horrendous threat to the subsistence and survival of human species. A fact that makes this concern more complex is that the problems are diverse in nature that is they belong to social, political as well as economic arenas. This means that grave attention and cooperation is required from world communities to address and mitigate them otherwise the consequences would surely be catastrophic (Austin 337-345).