Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

 

Thesis

(Redirected from Doctoral dissertation)
This article is about the thesis in dialectics and academia. For the 1996 Spanish film Thesis, see Thesis (film).

A thesis (literally: 'position' from the Greek θέσις) is an intellectual proposition. In dialectics, its combination with an antithesis produces a synthesis.

An academic thesis is a treatise written upon either a student's original research or a review of literature produced by others upon a topic. Either one is typically written to fulfill requirements for a higher degree, though usually the term refers to a graduate degree.

At some universities, the doctoral thesis is officially called dissertation. In many US and similar degree programs, a doctoral dissertation is a major part of the student's total time spent (along with 2-3 years of classes), and may take well over a year of full-time work to complete. In most UK doctoral degree programs, the thesis is often the only formally assessed part and three years or more is devoted to its research and production. Other nations will vary, and some universities even in the US have a thesis as the major (though generally not sole) requirement.

See also

Famous theses

External links

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy