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Writing a Philosophical Essay
Prepared by Ronald de Sousa
In your essay, you should strive to achieve three GENERAL GOALS
a) To formulate a clear statement of the problems and issues involved, giving the
reader a sense of their interest and philosophical importance. The reader should not be
left wondering "Why should I care?" In the course of doing this, you should
exhibit an accurate interpretation of any texts on which your dis- cussion is based,
including theses advanced & arguments adduced to support them. Puzzles & dilemmas
are good starting points.
b) To provide a carefully argued critical perspective of your own on the central ideas
under discussion. "Of your own" does not mean "completely original with
you": but it does imply that you have adopted a position and are prepared to explain
and defend it. (If the position does come from someone else, cite the source.)
c) To arrive at an assessment of the issues, based on a discussion in which you should
put forward the best possible defense of the posi- tion you think is the most
satisfactory. You are not, however, required to arrive at a settled conclusion. Presenting
your own position can quite well mean presenting a forceful dilemma which you are unable
to solve. Many an A paper (and many a published one) is valuable precisely because it
throws into sharp relief ambiguities and difficulties of interpretation and argument. You
might even present a multiplicity of incompatible perspectives, between which, for well
argued reasons, you cannot decide.
In structuring your philosophy essay, you might be guided by the following:
- Introduction: state what your argument or inquiry is going to be, and briefly
indicate your method of attack.
- Exposition: Set out the views, theses or claims that you will be advancing AND/OR
examining. You may construct the paper either around a thesis of your own, or around the
views held by authors of your readings. In either case, other views should be brought in
as foils for your own discussion. Make sure you support your claims about your authors'
views by precise citations. But DO NOT quote extensively: instead, paraphrase. Cite page
references to the text so that your readers can check up on you.
When discussing another author's argument, be sure to exhibit the structure of the
argument: Premises, unexpressed assumptions needed for the argument to go through, and
conclusion(s).
Pick out any crux of interpretation: define any special terms, and discuss any alternative
definitions that might be appropriate. Sharpen any difficulty found by suggesting contrary
alternative interpretations. If something is unclear, don't gloss it over: draw attention
to it. That way, you will get points even for what you don't understand!
- Discussion: Criticism of the views expounded in part 2.
Consider possible objections (perhaps taken from our authors, if you are highlighting a
thesis of your own), and do your best to defend yourself or your author(s) against them.
If an author(s)' argument is bad, explain why:
Is one or more of the premises false? (This makes the argument unsound.) Does the
conclusion not follow? (This is what it means to say the argument is invalid, if it is
intended to be deductive. If not, the premises may just be poor reasons for the
conclusion). Sometimes the best you can do might be to point out that the view you are
criticizing has highly implausible consequences.
Does the argument rely on assumptions that are unacceptable, or arbitrary, or debatable?
Does the argument contain crucial ambiguities? Is rhetoric substituted for argument at
some crucial stage?
(In 2 and 3, use the methods suggested in Writing Critical Summaries)
- [Only if you have started by considering other people's views]: Constructive Section:
Here you may set out your own assessment of the issues in question, and show how it
escapes the criticisms that you have leveled against the author(s) considered. You should
also defend your view against any obvious objections that might be or have been leveled
against it.
- Conclusion: Here you can briefly recapitulate the gist of your argument and
restate the central "message" that your paper has attempted to establish.
MECHANICS: An average philosophy term essay will be about 4000-6000 WORDS
(24K-36K characters; roughly 13-20 double-spaced pages). Use a dark ribbon. Dot matrix
"DRAFT" output is not acceptable. Don't footnote individual references: place
references in the text between brackets, and append a bibliography. TURN OFF RIGHT
JUSTIFICATION (this is optional ONLY IF you are using a high-quality proportional font).
Material prepared by Ronald de Sousa for distribution at the
University of Toronto
© 1995 Ronald de Sousa
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