Hello Guest
Search Paper
-- Category --
Accounting
Africa
Animal Rights/Zoology
Anthropology
Argumentative
Art/Architecture
Asian Studies
Biographies
Black Studies
Business Management
Canadian Studies
Career-Related Support
Communications/Media
Computers/Internet
Criminal Justice
Culinary Science
Drugs/Alcohol
Education
English/Creative Writing
Environmental/Ecology
Ethics
Gay/Lesbian
Global Politics
Health
History
Labor Studies
Latin-American
Law
Literature
Mathematics
Medicine/Pharmacy
Music/Film/Photography
Mythology
Philosophy
Poetry
Political Science
Psychology
Public Administration
Sciences
Shakespeare
Sociology
Sports
Technology
Theses/Dissertations
Urban Studies
Western Civilization
Women Issues
Search
Home
Register Now
Submit Paper
FAQ
Contact Us
Login
Subjects
Accounting
Africa
Animal Rights/Zoology
Anthropology
Argumentative
Art/Architecture
Asian Studies
Biographies
Black Studies
Business Management
Canadian Studies
Career-Related Support
Communications/Media
Computers/Internet
Culinary Science
English/Creative Writing
Criminal Justice
Drugs/Alcohol
Education
Environmental/Ecology
Ethics
Gay/Lesbian
Global Politics
Health
History
Labor Studies
Latin-American
Law
Literature
Mathematics
Medicine/Pharmacy
Music/Film/Photography
Mythology
Philosophy
Poetry
Political Science
Psychology
Public Administration
Sciences
Shakespeare
Sociology
Sports
Technology
Theses/Dissertations
Urban Studies
Western Civilization
Women Issues
IDEA - Search Results
1.
Descartes’ Deductive Reasoning, Definitions and Principles Used to Argue the Existence of God
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
This is a 5 page paper discussing Descartes’ deductive reasoning, definitions and principles used in proving the existence of God. In Rene Descartes’ Meditation III, he proposes a logical argument to prove the existence of God. To do this, he presents an internally consistent argument through deductive reasoning and in addition provides further clarification for the reader in terms of definitions of formal and objective reality and principles for reality which help clarify his argument. Even without the further definitions and explanations of the principles however, upon accepting the initial premises that “nothing comes from nothing”, “the cause of the effect must have as much reality as its effect”, and “the cause of the idea must have as much reality as the idea itself”, then the introduction of the idea of God, and the cause of this idea is logical in its conclusion that since only God has infinite reality then only God is the cause of the idea of God (also infinite reality) and therefore God exists. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
More Details
OrderNow
2.
Are the Legal Demands For Special Needs Students Facilitating Teacher Attrition?
2007, 12 Pages, 2837 Words, 11 Sources, 150 USD
More Details
OrderNow
3.
Position Paper on Special Education Inclusion
2008, 5 Pages, 953 Words, 7 Sources, 75 USD
More Details
OrderNow
4.
The Concept of Certainty: Locke and Hume
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
This is a 5 page paper discussing Locke’s and Hume’s concepts of certainty. In John Locke’s “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding” (1690) and David Hume’s “An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding” (1748) both philosophers examine the theory of knowledge and the aspects of ideas, relationships, and certainty. Locke used the different types of knowledge (intuitive, demonstrative, and sensory) to discuss the level of certainty of ideas based on their degree of probability and margin of error. All ideas could then be ranked hierarchically in regards to their degree of certainty. Intuitive and demonstrative knowledge had a different degree of evidence and certainty than did sensory knowledge. Hume, on the other hand, did not believe that anything outside of the sensory field, such as metaphysical discussions, could be considered certain. For Hume impressions were the most vivid elements of knowledge and ideas were less vivid but based on impressions. Ideas could be considered certain only if they were factual and had spatial or temporal relationships or mathematical universality and all other ideas had no certainty as they included doubt. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
More Details
OrderNow
5.
John Locke and David Hume on Power, Cause and Effect and Necessary Connections in their Essays Concerning Human Understanding
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
This is a 5 page paper discussing Locke and Hume’s perspectives on power, cause and effect, and necessary connections in their essays on human understanding. Philosophers John Locke and David Hume wrote on human understanding in regards to relationships, power, cause and effect and necessary connection. Locke who wrote “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding” in the late 17th century wrote of the relationships which exist between active and passive power, and the presence of cause and effect as necessary connections in the formulation of individual thoughts of substance, perceptions and ideas. David Hume, who wrote “An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding” in the mid-18th century basically rejected the causal connections argued by Locke in that man can only gain impressions or ideas from his own experience and that these ideas have “unknown causes”. In addition, things of substance and power are also only based on impressions and perceptions and cannot be considered concrete arguments. Both perspectives are still well received today but with some areas of contention. Locke presents a great deal of his material based on the assumption of God’s existence. However, his support of arguments for cause and effect hold within the scientific community. Hume, on the other hand, presents his arguments from a skeptical or atheist standpoint in which perceptions or ideas can only be formulated from experience; ideas also supported by the scientific community. However, Hume rejects the reliance of cause and effect to support arguments; a reliance which of course is a large factor in today’s society, not only from a scientific standpoint but from a philosophical and political standpoint as well. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
More Details
OrderNow
6.
Why Drugs Should Not and Must Not be Legalized
(7 Pages, 83.65 USD)
This 7 page report discusses the legalization of so-called "hard core" drugs and why such an approach is a bad idea. The idea of legalizing drugs such as cocaine, heroin, and hallucinogens is a patently bad idea with the potential for disaster if it were to ever be implemented. It is essential that people are educated at a very young age and presented with the appropriate social re-enforcers to understand that there are viable reasons that drugs are illegal - they destroy lives - and, as a result, should remain illegal. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
More Details
OrderNow
7.
A Look At Pirenne’s Thesis
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
A 5-page essay that explores the idea presented by Henri Pirenne’s thesis that the decline in European economics that marked the beginning of the Middle Ages began not with the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, but instead with the rise of Islam in the seventh century. Included is the reasoning behind Pirenne’s idea as well as the reasoning of those that oppose this idea. Bibliography includes 4 sources.
Paper Keywords -
ilams
More Details
OrderNow
8.
A Look At Pirenne's Thesis
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
A 5 page essay that explores the idea presented by Henri Pirenne's thesis that the decline in European economics that marked the beginning of the Middle Ages began not with the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, but instead with the rise of Islam in the seventh century. Included is the reasoning behind Pirenne's idea as well as the reasoning of those that oppose this idea. Bibliography includes 4 sources.
Paper Keywords -
darced
,
ilams
More Details
OrderNow
9.
The Theory Of Constraints Applied To The Non-Profit Organization
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
A 5 page paper applying the conclusions of Eli Goldratt, the father of the theory originally based in manufacturing systems. Eli Goldratt's work in scheduling systems for manufacturing operations brought him to a study of manufacturing bottlenecks, where an otherwise smoothly-flowing system can break down and destroy projected scheduling plans. To this idea he gave the name of Theory Of Constraints (TOC). Goldratt published The Goal, a novel in which manufacturing bottlenecks played a prime role, in the mid 1980s. From that, he developed the idea of TOC and the idea of throughput, a concept that increasingly is used in accounting for the not-for-profit organization. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
More Details
OrderNow
10.
Machiavelli's Idea Of Government
3 Pages, 1531 Words, 22 USD
More Details
OrderNow
Submit your Term Paper and get paid for every sale made
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
31
|
32
|
33
|
34
|
35
|
36
|
37
|
38
|
39
|
40
|
41
|
42
|
43
|
44
|
45
|
46
|
47
|
48
|
49
|
50
|
51
|
52
|
53
|
54
|
55
|
56
|
57
|
58
|
59
|
60
|
61
|
62
|
63
|
64
|
65
|
66
|
67
|
68
|
69
|
70
|
71
|
72
|
73
|
74
|
75
|
76
|
77
|
78
|
79
|
80
|
81
|
82
|
83
|
84
|
85
|
86
|
87
|
88
|
89
|
90
|
91
|
92
|
93
|
94
|
95
|
96
|
97
|
98
|
99
|
100
|
101
|
102
|
103
|
104
|
105
|
106
|
107
|
108
|
109
|
110
|
111
|
112
|
113
|
114
|
115
|
116
|
117
|
118
|
119
|
120
|
121
|
122
|
123
|
124
|
125
|
126
|
127
|
128
|
129
|
130
|
131
|
132
|
133
|
134
|
135
|
136
|
137
|
138
|
139
|
140
|
141
|
142
|
143
|
144
|
145
|
146
|
147
|
148
|
149
|
150
|
151
|
152
|
153
|
154
|
155
|
156
|
157
|
158
|
159
|
160
|
161
|
162
|
163
|
164
|
165
|
166
|
167
|
168
|
169
|
170
|
171
|
172
|
173
|
174
|
175
|
176
|
177
|
178
|
179
|
180
|
181
|
182
|
183
|
184
|
185
|
186
|
187
|
188
|
189
|
190
|
191
|
192
|
193
|
194
|
195
|
196
|
197
|
198
|
199
|
200
|
201
|
202
|
203
|
204
|
205
|
206
|
207
|
208
|
209
|
210
|
211
|
212
|
213
|
214
|
215
|
216
|
217
|
218
|
219
|
220
|
221
|
222
|
223
|
Next Page
Last Page
Search Term Papers
Search
You are in search result page of the pharse
"IDEA"
.
UniversiTip
Register Now
Submit Paper
Tell Your Friends
First Time ?
Buyer Guide
Seller Guide
Term Papers
Writing guide
Custom paper
Sell Papers
Sell your essays and term papers at UniversiTip and get revenues for life!
Join Now
Testimonials
"I have published 9 papers and invited my friends – already made more then
600$"
Home
|
About Us
|
Contact Us
|
Link Exchange
|
Affiliation
|
Rules
Copyright 2005 all rights reserved to SmartBiz ltd.
Universitip -
buy term papers
at the internet's largest marketplace for term papers and essays.
[Created by
] [
smarter
] [
free articles
] [
find articles
] [
satellite tv for pc
]