Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Philosophy And Skepticism. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Stoic philosophy incorporated a number of beliefs pertaining to logic, physics and ethics that comprised their very existence, a reality that varied considerably from that of the Epicureans. Determinism was the mantra for Stoicism, however it was a guided path provided by intelligence instead of mechanics. Because Stoicism was bound by right and wrong with no middle ground in between, it stood to reason how those who were born of wisdom were privileged to inherit righteousness; for those without benefit of knowledge and good judgment, they were always to be inferior. To the contrary, Epicurus espoused a life of choice that is derived from one's fearlessness of death and the gods, as well as keeping desires in check; moreover, this pursuit of pleasure is not realized by virtue of some whim of fate but rather is a compilation of the decisions one makes in relation to one's life. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPhilSkept.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
mantra for Stoicism, however it was a guided path provided by intelligence instead of mechanics. Because Stoicism was bound by right and wrong with no middle ground in between,
it stood to reason how those who were born of wisdom were privileged to inherit righteousness; for those without benefit of knowledge and good judgment, they were always to be
inferior. To the contrary, Epicurus espoused a life of choice that is derived from ones fearlessness of death and the gods, as well as keeping desires in check; moreover,
this pursuit of pleasure is not realized by virtue of some whim of fate but rather is a compilation of the decisions one makes in relation to ones life (Bolyard,
2006). In this vein, the Stoics believed the gods were the omnipotent source of all that occurred, both good and evil; as such, man was no more in charge of
his own existence than is a bird in a gilded cage; only those who possessed wisdom were believed to have the capacity to defeat physical evils. Moral evils, however,
were a different story altogether, being how the Stoics were convinced how the gods ruled their world and everything that happened in it, including moral evil. Epicurus, by contrast,
believed just the opposite and openly asserted how the gods have no sway over anyones life. Freedom was his watchword in direct disparity to Stoicism determinism, with mortality a
particularly pertinent aspect of that belief (Bolyard, 2006). Epicurus held quite a different perspective of human mortality, philosophizing how death - held as
ominous and fear-inducing to most - does not represent anything to ones life. While it does reflect the end of the mortal existence, it is a time for revitalization.
...