question archive Plato's Objectivism and/or Theory of Forms, John Stuart Mill's "limited God" explanation of evil, Jacob Boehme's philosophy of evil, Friedrich Nietzsche's morality, Jean Paul Sartre's subjective relativism, Thomas Hobbes' State of Law and Nature, Aristotle's Virtue Ethics, Jeremy Bentham's philosophy of Utilitarianism, Descriptivism and Normativism  on a case by case basis

Plato's Objectivism and/or Theory of Forms, John Stuart Mill's "limited God" explanation of evil, Jacob Boehme's philosophy of evil, Friedrich Nietzsche's morality, Jean Paul Sartre's subjective relativism, Thomas Hobbes' State of Law and Nature, Aristotle's Virtue Ethics, Jeremy Bentham's philosophy of Utilitarianism, Descriptivism and Normativism  on a case by case basis

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Plato's Objectivism and/or Theory of Forms, John Stuart Mill's "limited God" explanation of evil, Jacob Boehme's philosophy of evil, Friedrich Nietzsche's morality, Jean Paul Sartre's subjective relativism, Thomas Hobbes' State of Law and Nature, Aristotle's Virtue Ethics, Jeremy Bentham's philosophy of Utilitarianism, Descriptivism and Normativism 

on a case by case basis. Please note that I need to approve them BEFORE you begin researching

1) First paragraph: Introduce topic/subject and present your thesis (what you will be arguing for or against). In other words, explain whether you agree with the entire philosophy, part of it or none of it. 

2) Proceed to describe the philosophy as "objectively" as possible and then argue for it or against it using scholarly sources, other philosophers and your own critical thinking. 

3) Conclusion by summarizing main points of paper and giving your own opinion. 

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