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Final Research Paper Assignment: Detailed Guidelines
:
You are asked to write a paper of 1700-words (minimum word
count—any paper more than 150 words short of this minimum
will not be accepted as a complete paper) to 2000-words
(maximum word count—you may exceed this without penalty
only if it essential to attaining the purpose of your paper). Your
paper must cite the work of at least four philosophers studied
during the course; there is no upper limit on the number of
sources you may use. You have the option of writing a position
paper or a comparison essay, depending on whether your plan is
to argue in favor of an original position regarding the work and
thought of at least four philosophers covered in the course or to
comparatively evaluate the work of four or more philosophers.
The topics below may be approached using either strategy; you
may find that some will better lend themselves to a position
paper (also known as an argumentative essay) and some will
work better as a comparison essay. Choose the topic that most
interests you and the strategy that works best for you.
Topic Areas
1) Plato, Hume, Kant, and Russell: What is human knowledge?
2) Kant, Mill, Aristotle, and Kierkegaard: What is the ethical
life?
3) Sartre, James, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is an
authentic, autonomous individual?
4) Descartes, Hume, Searle, and James: What is consciousness?
5) Plato, Kant, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is truth?
6) Plato, Descartes, Hume, and Nietzsche: What is the soul or
self (conceived as an entity that is purely mental, spiritual, or
nonphysical)?
7) Sartre, James, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is the role
and value of religious faith?
8) Descartes, Kant, Sartre, and Nietzsche: What is free will and
why does it matter?
9) Socrates/Plato, Russell, Sartre, and Nietzsche: What is the
role and value of philosophy?
This assignment is broken into two parts:
Part I includes the following elements
:
- Title of the paper (please do not create a separate title page).
Special note: DO NOT title your paper, "Final Paper." Your title
is important; it should give the reader an immediate snapshot of
what the paper will say and attempt to draw the reader in.
- Introductory paragraph (including your thesis). This is a very
important part of the paper--it should not be too short or too
long (but probably at least five sentences). Begin by introducing
the general topic and providing the reader with some rationale
for why this topic, and what you will say about it, is worth
thinking and reading about. Good writers usually begin with a
"hook" in the first line to draw the reader in. You might pose an
interesting or intriguing question, bring in an apposite quote, or
make a controversial or surprising claim—even one that seems
to go against your thesis. You will soon bring the reader around
to what your position is when you state your thesis, which is
usually very near the end of the first paragraph. The
introductory paragraph should also provide some background on
the topic in question that leads into the purpose of the paper.
Make sure that the issue that your paper calls into question is
crystal clear. Your thesis statement (your position on the issue)
may be simple and straightforward, with all development
following in the body of the paper, or you may choose to
forecast in the thesis itself the claims your will bring forward in
support of the thesis in the argumentation sections.
- An informal list of possible sources. Don't worry too much
about precise formatting here; this will be expected in the final
draft, but here, the point is just for the instructor to see if you
are headed in the right direction and possibly recommend
additional resources that will be useful to you.
Part II
, which is your completed final draft (that is, the finished
version), should include the following:
- An introduction that states the issue being debated, identifies
the issue’s two or more sides, and makes an explicit claim
(thesis) that the position paper or argumentative essay will
support.
- The body paragraphs, which will present your sustained
argumentation in support of your thesis. In a comparison essay,
you will be mainly concerned with first summarizing and
explaining the various philosophical views or positions you are
comparing and contrasting, and then showing why the
comparative claim you make in your thesis is true, or at least to
be preferred over others. In a position paper, you will be
concerned to address at least one opposing or alternative claim
to what your thesis states and to both shows why your position
is right and the opposing view is wrong, or at least less
acceptable than the position asserted in your thesis. (See below
for more details.
- A conclusion that drives home your main point and looks to
the future.
- A complete and properly formatted works-cited page or list of
references.
Whether you choose to write a position paper or a comparison
essay, your thesis is an essential element of the paper. Focus in
on the specific and significant issue you wish to address within
your selected topic area (an issue is any claim that may be
called into question). Your thesis should state a specific and
significant point of view or position on the issue (or set of
related issues) you have chosen to write about. In a position
paper, the thesis will make an argumentative claim (that is, a
debatable or even controversial claim); in a comparison essay,
the thesis will make a comparative claim. Your paper should
include analyses and discussion of terms, concepts, principles,
theories, arguments, etc., that are importantly related to your
topic area.
Remember that you will need at least four citations from four
different Required Readings (works by the four philosophers in
your selected topic area). You may include citations from other
works by your selected philosophers or by other authors in
addition to the four-course readings, but you do not need more
than the four-course readings for full credit. The point of this
research paper is to go deeper, not simply to sample more
relevant reading selections. The goal here is to demonstrate
your grasp of the particular philosophical ideas you are
addressing as well as your overall attainment of course learning
outcomes.
How to Write a Position Paper
This is a research paper in which you will address a particular
issue related to a more general topic area. The paper should be
written in a formal style, in the third-person voice, and it will
present your original, considered solution or unique approach to
solving the problem or settling the issue in question. It will be
your considered opinion, but the main point of writing a
position paper is not only to let others know your opinion or
point of view on an issue or particular topic, but also to lay out,
in a clear and logical manner, the reasons why you hold this
point of view. The presentation of your “reasons why,” in other
words, the sum total of evidence you can bring forward to
support your position, plus a statement of the position itself,
comprises what philosophers call an “argument.” A position
paper is also known as an “argumentative essay.” As a quick
reminder: A philosophical argument is simply giving reasons
(the premises of the argument) for why a particular claim (the
conclusion of the argument) should be taken as true.
The introductory paragraph should present the issue in question
and include a clear and precise statement of your thesis, which
is your position on the issue. Another essential element of the
position paper or argumentative essay is a consideration of at
least one alternative position on the same issue, and this is
typically an opposing view. So in this paper, you will assert and
defend your own position, and you will also consider at least
one opposing or alternative position on the issue and the
argument(s) in support of that view. Finally, you will show why
you reject any opposing or alternative position and instead hold
the one you do. For this assignment, if you do a position paper,
you will be taking a stand that in some way connects all four of
the philosophers you are covering. For example, you may think
that only one of the four thinkers gets it right on some
important philosophical question. In this case, your thesis might
assert your agreement or approval of a particular theory or
account, and your arguments will provide the reasons why you
made the choice you did and why you rejected the alternative
views. You might agree with a point on which all four agree,
and your thesis would indicate this; you might also disagree
with all four, and then your thesis would be that they all get it
wrong, and your argumentation shows why, and so on. In a
position paper, you will likely be arguing in favor of the view
or views with which you agree most.
There are several different ways of organizing a position paper,
but, after you have introduced your topic and given some
background on why this topic is worth thinking and writing
about, and then stated your thesis in the introduction, often the
opposing view(s) are fairly presented first, and then your
understanding of the issue follows. You own position is then
asserted and shown to be superior to the opposing view(s). This
can be done in “block” or “point-by-point” fashion: use the
organization style that best suits your purposes. You may also
choose to present your positive argumentation first; just use the
strategy that works best for your purposes. The conclusion of
your paper will re-state your “expanded” thesis, setting it back
into its more general framework with a look forward toward
related concerns. Your conclusion should be brief, but it should
leave the reader with the belief that your position satisfactorily
settles the issue, solves the problem, and leads to a better state
of affairs. You may also want to use descriptive headings for
each of the major sections of the paper. But don't use the
section heading, “Introduction” above your introductory
paragraph: the title of your paper serves that purpose. And for
the conclusion, don't just use the word,“Conclusion”; instead,
just as in any other section heading, encapsulate the essence of
the content of that section. Section headings are optional (but in
a paper like this, which includes discussion of four different
thinkers, it might help the organization of the paper).
Note that this is quite different from an informational report, an
expository essay, or even a commentary or critique of a report
or informative essay. You will be writing about at least two
sides of an issue (usually the “pro” and the “con” positions),
developing supporting evidence for both sides, analyzing,
evaluating, and refuting competing arguments, and showing and
explaining why your argument and the conclusion it supports
(your thesis) is superior. So, for example, if your thesis is the
assertion that Philosophers A and B get it right but Philosophers
C and D get it wrong, you must consider at least one credible
opposing side to this claim, and show why it may be safely
rejected. For an excellent and detailed explanation (with
illustrative examples) of how to write a position paper or
argumentative essay (the document uses the term“argument
essay”), please read Pearson Publishing’s chapter on “Position
Papers,” which is linked in the Final Research Paper module. It
tells you everything you need to know, and if you follow the
instructions here to the letter, you are sure to get a high mark on
the paper, and you will have gained valuable knowledge about
to construct an important and respected style of academic essay.
Also linked in the course are two shorter documents, “Writing a
Position Paper,” from Simon Fraser University (6 pages),
and“Argumentative Essays,” (2 pages) from Purdue Online
Writing Lab, a website that provides a wealth of helpful
information about all aspects of academic writing.
How to Write a Comparison Essay
The method of comparison and contrast may be used to analyze,
understand, and evaluate the ideas, theories and arguments of a
philosophical thinker. In a comparison essay, you will consider
both similarities and differences between different philosophies.
You will begin with a brief formal analysis of the four views or
philosophical approaches you are comparing and contrasting.
Then add another level to the discussion by pointing out,
analyzing, and interpreting relevant similarities and differences
between or among the ideas and theories in question. Remember
that the comparisons you make should make a point--the
comparison is headed toward establishing something you
observe or interpret about the ideas, theories, and approaches in
question. You will also be stating your thesis in the
introduction, but in this case, your thesis will make some claim
(which is, of course, debatable) that relates the work of the four
thinkers included in your topic area in terms of how they
compare to each other on some specific issue. Your comparative
thesis may focus more on the specific similarities and
differences in the work and thought of each of the four
philosophers in relation to a specific issue or philosophical idea
or problem without deciding who “gets it right” or with which
view you most agree.
In the body of the paper, you will be arguing for your
comparative thesis. This means that you will be providing
grounds (your evidence or support) for the comparative claims
you make. A successful comparative essay will be strong in two
areas in particular: (1) the originality and depth of the
comparative claim(s) and (2) the quality of argumentation you
bring forward to support those claims. A comparison essay that
presents little more than a “laundry list” of features attributable
to each of the four philosophers’views will not receive high
marks. You must go beyond this to say something specific and
significant based on the comparative evidence. Please note that
comparison essays often compare and contrast only two things;
the challenge in this assignment, should you decide to use the
comparison essay strategy, is to compare and contrast FOUR
things—the views and ideas of four different philosophers. That
said, it may make sense for you to put the four thinkers you are
discussing into two categories (and this could mean that the
four divide into two neatly divided positions, with two
philosophers on one side and two others on the other side, or it
may make sense to divide the four into a one-to-three ratio, with
one philosopher on one side of things and three others on more
or less the same page. It is possible that all four philosophical
views are so disparate that there can be no less than four sides
to the issue in question. If the four thinkers you are considering
are all this different, it would likely be better to use the
position-paper strategy.
Comparisons may be organized in block (also called “text-by-
text”) or point-by-point style, sometimes called "lumping" and
"splitting." In using the block, or lumping, method, you will
discuss all the details and aspects of interest in the work of one
of your four philosophers, then move on to the work of the other
three you are including in your comparison. As you move from
the work of one thinker to another in the discussion, be sure to
refer back to those already discussed. You are not simply
writing a series of descriptions here; you are showing that
something is the case about the ideas, arguments, or theories in
question by comparing and contrasting them. In the point-by-
point, or splitting, method, you alternate your discussion to
focus on, for example, what each of the four has to say on a
particular point or aspect of the issue in question. So you will
be going through what each one has to say on a particular point
in the same paragraph, and then move on to cover how each of
the four weighs in on another point or element integral to the
issue in question.. Use whichever method works best to
accomplish your expressive and analytical goals. It is crucial to
keep in mind why the comparison contained in your thesis is
revealing or illustrative of something important you have to say
that relates the work and thought of the four philosophers in
your topic area. There are three documents linked in the course
that provide more details and helpful guidelines and suggestions
for writing a comparison essay or comparative analysis: “How
to Write a ComparativeAnalysis,” (2 pages) from Harvard
College, “The Comparative Essay,” (2 pages) from the
University of Toronto, and “Comparative Analysis” (14 pages)
from Mississippi State University.
Organization and Formatting
It is important for you to state your thesis clearly and
unequivocally at the beginning of the paper. Note that if you are
doing a position paper, you may adopt some sort of “middle-
ground position,” as opposed to taking a strictly “pro” or “con”
stance, but you will have to carefully explain and delineate such
a position since simply saying that both sides get some things
right and hence they also get some things wrong could lead to
your supporting a logically inconsistent view. It also risks being
an insignificant thesis. A strong thesis is one that is both
specific and significant: this means that the claim you are
making, the position you are defending, is one with which an
informed thinker may disagree. If your thesis merely states the
obvious, or asserts what most people accept as common
knowledge, it is not significant. This is a relatively short paper,
so be sure to appropriately narrow the focus of your thesis so
that you can accomplish what you need to do in the space
allowed.
As noted above, the paper should be somewhere between 1700
and 2000 words, or about 5-6 typewritten, double-spaced pages
(not including title page and works cited/references page). Also,
to reiterate what is said above, to earn full credit for this
assignment, your position paper or comparative essay must
include at least one citation (probably more than this) from each
of the four philosophers in your selected topic area, and this
citation must be from the course Required Readings. So this is a
minimum of four sources that must be cited in the paper for
satisfying the basic assignment requirements. There is no upper
limit. Just be sure you use credible and clearly traceable
sources.
In addition, you are free to bring in personal experience if it is
relevant to your argument. This means that you may use the
first-person voice if it makes sense in your exposition.
Otherwise, stick to the third-person voice; avoid use of the
second person (“you,” “your,” etc.—note that these assignment
guidelines do use the second-person voice, which is appropriate
for such purposes).The paper should be typewritten and double-
spaced, using MLA, APA, or CMS documentation style, with a
type font similar to Times New Roman, 12 point. Be sure to cite
all sources both within the text of the paper as well as on a
works-cited page (MLA), list of references (APA), or
bibliography (CMS). Avoid fancy fonts and flashy document-
template formats, but you may include images, graphs, charts,
or diagrams if they help establish a point. Be sure you have
included all of the elements essential to writing strategy you
have selected.

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Final Research Paper Assignment Detailed GuidelinesYou are

  • 1. Final Research Paper Assignment: Detailed Guidelines : You are asked to write a paper of 1700-words (minimum word count—any paper more than 150 words short of this minimum will not be accepted as a complete paper) to 2000-words (maximum word count—you may exceed this without penalty only if it essential to attaining the purpose of your paper). Your paper must cite the work of at least four philosophers studied during the course; there is no upper limit on the number of sources you may use. You have the option of writing a position paper or a comparison essay, depending on whether your plan is to argue in favor of an original position regarding the work and thought of at least four philosophers covered in the course or to comparatively evaluate the work of four or more philosophers. The topics below may be approached using either strategy; you may find that some will better lend themselves to a position paper (also known as an argumentative essay) and some will work better as a comparison essay. Choose the topic that most interests you and the strategy that works best for you. Topic Areas 1) Plato, Hume, Kant, and Russell: What is human knowledge? 2) Kant, Mill, Aristotle, and Kierkegaard: What is the ethical life? 3) Sartre, James, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is an authentic, autonomous individual? 4) Descartes, Hume, Searle, and James: What is consciousness?
  • 2. 5) Plato, Kant, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is truth? 6) Plato, Descartes, Hume, and Nietzsche: What is the soul or self (conceived as an entity that is purely mental, spiritual, or nonphysical)? 7) Sartre, James, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche: What is the role and value of religious faith? 8) Descartes, Kant, Sartre, and Nietzsche: What is free will and why does it matter? 9) Socrates/Plato, Russell, Sartre, and Nietzsche: What is the role and value of philosophy? This assignment is broken into two parts: Part I includes the following elements : - Title of the paper (please do not create a separate title page). Special note: DO NOT title your paper, "Final Paper." Your title is important; it should give the reader an immediate snapshot of what the paper will say and attempt to draw the reader in. - Introductory paragraph (including your thesis). This is a very important part of the paper--it should not be too short or too long (but probably at least five sentences). Begin by introducing the general topic and providing the reader with some rationale for why this topic, and what you will say about it, is worth thinking and reading about. Good writers usually begin with a "hook" in the first line to draw the reader in. You might pose an interesting or intriguing question, bring in an apposite quote, or
  • 3. make a controversial or surprising claim—even one that seems to go against your thesis. You will soon bring the reader around to what your position is when you state your thesis, which is usually very near the end of the first paragraph. The introductory paragraph should also provide some background on the topic in question that leads into the purpose of the paper. Make sure that the issue that your paper calls into question is crystal clear. Your thesis statement (your position on the issue) may be simple and straightforward, with all development following in the body of the paper, or you may choose to forecast in the thesis itself the claims your will bring forward in support of the thesis in the argumentation sections. - An informal list of possible sources. Don't worry too much about precise formatting here; this will be expected in the final draft, but here, the point is just for the instructor to see if you are headed in the right direction and possibly recommend additional resources that will be useful to you. Part II , which is your completed final draft (that is, the finished version), should include the following: - An introduction that states the issue being debated, identifies the issue’s two or more sides, and makes an explicit claim (thesis) that the position paper or argumentative essay will support. - The body paragraphs, which will present your sustained argumentation in support of your thesis. In a comparison essay, you will be mainly concerned with first summarizing and explaining the various philosophical views or positions you are comparing and contrasting, and then showing why the comparative claim you make in your thesis is true, or at least to be preferred over others. In a position paper, you will be
  • 4. concerned to address at least one opposing or alternative claim to what your thesis states and to both shows why your position is right and the opposing view is wrong, or at least less acceptable than the position asserted in your thesis. (See below for more details. - A conclusion that drives home your main point and looks to the future. - A complete and properly formatted works-cited page or list of references. Whether you choose to write a position paper or a comparison essay, your thesis is an essential element of the paper. Focus in on the specific and significant issue you wish to address within your selected topic area (an issue is any claim that may be called into question). Your thesis should state a specific and significant point of view or position on the issue (or set of related issues) you have chosen to write about. In a position paper, the thesis will make an argumentative claim (that is, a debatable or even controversial claim); in a comparison essay, the thesis will make a comparative claim. Your paper should include analyses and discussion of terms, concepts, principles, theories, arguments, etc., that are importantly related to your topic area. Remember that you will need at least four citations from four different Required Readings (works by the four philosophers in your selected topic area). You may include citations from other works by your selected philosophers or by other authors in addition to the four-course readings, but you do not need more than the four-course readings for full credit. The point of this research paper is to go deeper, not simply to sample more relevant reading selections. The goal here is to demonstrate
  • 5. your grasp of the particular philosophical ideas you are addressing as well as your overall attainment of course learning outcomes. How to Write a Position Paper This is a research paper in which you will address a particular issue related to a more general topic area. The paper should be written in a formal style, in the third-person voice, and it will present your original, considered solution or unique approach to solving the problem or settling the issue in question. It will be your considered opinion, but the main point of writing a position paper is not only to let others know your opinion or point of view on an issue or particular topic, but also to lay out, in a clear and logical manner, the reasons why you hold this point of view. The presentation of your “reasons why,” in other words, the sum total of evidence you can bring forward to support your position, plus a statement of the position itself, comprises what philosophers call an “argument.” A position paper is also known as an “argumentative essay.” As a quick reminder: A philosophical argument is simply giving reasons (the premises of the argument) for why a particular claim (the conclusion of the argument) should be taken as true. The introductory paragraph should present the issue in question and include a clear and precise statement of your thesis, which is your position on the issue. Another essential element of the position paper or argumentative essay is a consideration of at least one alternative position on the same issue, and this is typically an opposing view. So in this paper, you will assert and defend your own position, and you will also consider at least one opposing or alternative position on the issue and the argument(s) in support of that view. Finally, you will show why
  • 6. you reject any opposing or alternative position and instead hold the one you do. For this assignment, if you do a position paper, you will be taking a stand that in some way connects all four of the philosophers you are covering. For example, you may think that only one of the four thinkers gets it right on some important philosophical question. In this case, your thesis might assert your agreement or approval of a particular theory or account, and your arguments will provide the reasons why you made the choice you did and why you rejected the alternative views. You might agree with a point on which all four agree, and your thesis would indicate this; you might also disagree with all four, and then your thesis would be that they all get it wrong, and your argumentation shows why, and so on. In a position paper, you will likely be arguing in favor of the view or views with which you agree most. There are several different ways of organizing a position paper, but, after you have introduced your topic and given some background on why this topic is worth thinking and writing about, and then stated your thesis in the introduction, often the opposing view(s) are fairly presented first, and then your understanding of the issue follows. You own position is then asserted and shown to be superior to the opposing view(s). This can be done in “block” or “point-by-point” fashion: use the organization style that best suits your purposes. You may also choose to present your positive argumentation first; just use the strategy that works best for your purposes. The conclusion of your paper will re-state your “expanded” thesis, setting it back into its more general framework with a look forward toward related concerns. Your conclusion should be brief, but it should leave the reader with the belief that your position satisfactorily settles the issue, solves the problem, and leads to a better state of affairs. You may also want to use descriptive headings for each of the major sections of the paper. But don't use the section heading, “Introduction” above your introductory
  • 7. paragraph: the title of your paper serves that purpose. And for the conclusion, don't just use the word,“Conclusion”; instead, just as in any other section heading, encapsulate the essence of the content of that section. Section headings are optional (but in a paper like this, which includes discussion of four different thinkers, it might help the organization of the paper). Note that this is quite different from an informational report, an expository essay, or even a commentary or critique of a report or informative essay. You will be writing about at least two sides of an issue (usually the “pro” and the “con” positions), developing supporting evidence for both sides, analyzing, evaluating, and refuting competing arguments, and showing and explaining why your argument and the conclusion it supports (your thesis) is superior. So, for example, if your thesis is the assertion that Philosophers A and B get it right but Philosophers C and D get it wrong, you must consider at least one credible opposing side to this claim, and show why it may be safely rejected. For an excellent and detailed explanation (with illustrative examples) of how to write a position paper or argumentative essay (the document uses the term“argument essay”), please read Pearson Publishing’s chapter on “Position Papers,” which is linked in the Final Research Paper module. It tells you everything you need to know, and if you follow the instructions here to the letter, you are sure to get a high mark on the paper, and you will have gained valuable knowledge about to construct an important and respected style of academic essay. Also linked in the course are two shorter documents, “Writing a Position Paper,” from Simon Fraser University (6 pages), and“Argumentative Essays,” (2 pages) from Purdue Online Writing Lab, a website that provides a wealth of helpful information about all aspects of academic writing.
  • 8. How to Write a Comparison Essay The method of comparison and contrast may be used to analyze, understand, and evaluate the ideas, theories and arguments of a philosophical thinker. In a comparison essay, you will consider both similarities and differences between different philosophies. You will begin with a brief formal analysis of the four views or philosophical approaches you are comparing and contrasting. Then add another level to the discussion by pointing out, analyzing, and interpreting relevant similarities and differences between or among the ideas and theories in question. Remember that the comparisons you make should make a point--the comparison is headed toward establishing something you observe or interpret about the ideas, theories, and approaches in question. You will also be stating your thesis in the introduction, but in this case, your thesis will make some claim (which is, of course, debatable) that relates the work of the four thinkers included in your topic area in terms of how they compare to each other on some specific issue. Your comparative thesis may focus more on the specific similarities and differences in the work and thought of each of the four philosophers in relation to a specific issue or philosophical idea or problem without deciding who “gets it right” or with which view you most agree. In the body of the paper, you will be arguing for your comparative thesis. This means that you will be providing grounds (your evidence or support) for the comparative claims you make. A successful comparative essay will be strong in two areas in particular: (1) the originality and depth of the comparative claim(s) and (2) the quality of argumentation you bring forward to support those claims. A comparison essay that presents little more than a “laundry list” of features attributable to each of the four philosophers’views will not receive high
  • 9. marks. You must go beyond this to say something specific and significant based on the comparative evidence. Please note that comparison essays often compare and contrast only two things; the challenge in this assignment, should you decide to use the comparison essay strategy, is to compare and contrast FOUR things—the views and ideas of four different philosophers. That said, it may make sense for you to put the four thinkers you are discussing into two categories (and this could mean that the four divide into two neatly divided positions, with two philosophers on one side and two others on the other side, or it may make sense to divide the four into a one-to-three ratio, with one philosopher on one side of things and three others on more or less the same page. It is possible that all four philosophical views are so disparate that there can be no less than four sides to the issue in question. If the four thinkers you are considering are all this different, it would likely be better to use the position-paper strategy. Comparisons may be organized in block (also called “text-by- text”) or point-by-point style, sometimes called "lumping" and "splitting." In using the block, or lumping, method, you will discuss all the details and aspects of interest in the work of one of your four philosophers, then move on to the work of the other three you are including in your comparison. As you move from the work of one thinker to another in the discussion, be sure to refer back to those already discussed. You are not simply writing a series of descriptions here; you are showing that something is the case about the ideas, arguments, or theories in question by comparing and contrasting them. In the point-by- point, or splitting, method, you alternate your discussion to focus on, for example, what each of the four has to say on a particular point or aspect of the issue in question. So you will be going through what each one has to say on a particular point in the same paragraph, and then move on to cover how each of the four weighs in on another point or element integral to the
  • 10. issue in question.. Use whichever method works best to accomplish your expressive and analytical goals. It is crucial to keep in mind why the comparison contained in your thesis is revealing or illustrative of something important you have to say that relates the work and thought of the four philosophers in your topic area. There are three documents linked in the course that provide more details and helpful guidelines and suggestions for writing a comparison essay or comparative analysis: “How to Write a ComparativeAnalysis,” (2 pages) from Harvard College, “The Comparative Essay,” (2 pages) from the University of Toronto, and “Comparative Analysis” (14 pages) from Mississippi State University. Organization and Formatting It is important for you to state your thesis clearly and unequivocally at the beginning of the paper. Note that if you are doing a position paper, you may adopt some sort of “middle- ground position,” as opposed to taking a strictly “pro” or “con” stance, but you will have to carefully explain and delineate such a position since simply saying that both sides get some things right and hence they also get some things wrong could lead to your supporting a logically inconsistent view. It also risks being an insignificant thesis. A strong thesis is one that is both specific and significant: this means that the claim you are making, the position you are defending, is one with which an informed thinker may disagree. If your thesis merely states the obvious, or asserts what most people accept as common knowledge, it is not significant. This is a relatively short paper, so be sure to appropriately narrow the focus of your thesis so that you can accomplish what you need to do in the space allowed.
  • 11. As noted above, the paper should be somewhere between 1700 and 2000 words, or about 5-6 typewritten, double-spaced pages (not including title page and works cited/references page). Also, to reiterate what is said above, to earn full credit for this assignment, your position paper or comparative essay must include at least one citation (probably more than this) from each of the four philosophers in your selected topic area, and this citation must be from the course Required Readings. So this is a minimum of four sources that must be cited in the paper for satisfying the basic assignment requirements. There is no upper limit. Just be sure you use credible and clearly traceable sources. In addition, you are free to bring in personal experience if it is relevant to your argument. This means that you may use the first-person voice if it makes sense in your exposition. Otherwise, stick to the third-person voice; avoid use of the second person (“you,” “your,” etc.—note that these assignment guidelines do use the second-person voice, which is appropriate for such purposes).The paper should be typewritten and double- spaced, using MLA, APA, or CMS documentation style, with a type font similar to Times New Roman, 12 point. Be sure to cite all sources both within the text of the paper as well as on a works-cited page (MLA), list of references (APA), or bibliography (CMS). Avoid fancy fonts and flashy document- template formats, but you may include images, graphs, charts, or diagrams if they help establish a point. Be sure you have included all of the elements essential to writing strategy you have selected.