Writing To Reason - Brian David Mogck
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Présentation Writing To Reason de Brian David Mogck Format Non Precisé
- Livre Philosophie
Résumé : Writing to Reason presents the principles of writing a clear and well-argued philosophy paper in an easily-referenced numerical format, which facilitates efficient grading and clearer communication between instructors and students.
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Biographie:
Brian David Mogck is the author of Is Logic Syntax of Language?: Carnap's Programme, G?del's Critique, and Wittgenstein's Evasion. He earned a PhD in philosophy from Emory University and taught at Emory, Spelman College, and Clayton College and State University. He received a JD from Columbia Law School, and is now an attorney in New York....
Sommaire: Preface: A Users' Guide ix P.1 A Note to Instructors ix P.2 A Note to Students xii Acknowledgments xviii Glossary of Philosophical Terms xix Part I: Writing Philosophy 1 1 Writing a Philosophy Paper 3 1.1 What is a Philosophy Paper Supposed to Accomplish? 3 1.2 Choosing a Topic 4 1.3 Moving through Drafts 11 1.4 The Only Outline You Need is a Sketch of the Argument You Plan to Make 12 1.5 The Cardinal Virtues: Logical Rigor and Clarity of Expression 13 1.6 A Checklist for Spotting Problems Early 14 2 Philosophical Writing Advances a Thesis with an Argument 16 2.1 Consuming Arguments 16 1 What is an argument? 16 2 How is a philosopher's argument to be recognized? 21 3 The principle of charity 23 4 How is an argument to be criticized? 25 2.2 Producing Arguments 28 5 A clearly stated, tightly focused thesis is essential 28 6 The introduction states why you wrote the paper and why your audience should read it 29 7 The body of your paper follows a strategy to demonstrate your thesis 30 8 Consider objections to your view 32 9 The conclusion of your paper explains the conclusion of your argument 34 10 On words that indicate conclusions and premises 35 11 Provide justifi cation for every important claim 35 12 What makes an argument philosophically interesting? 36 3 The Rudiments of Academic Writing 40 3.1 Elements of Style 40 13 Use the fi rst-person, active voice 40 14 Avoid using a conversational tone 41 15 The paper should have a title 41 16 Pages should be numbered 42 17 The correct use of punctuation 42 18 The correct use of Latin abbreviations 43 19 The correct use of Latin expressions 44 20 The consistent use of pronouns 47 21 Grammatical errors 47 22 Using a term vs. mentioning it 48 23 How to edit or add text within a quotation 49 3.2 Elements of Substance 50 24 Avoid mere rhetoric: philosophy is not forensics 50 25 Avoid using fi ve-star vocabulary words 52 26 The standard of precision in written discourse 53 27 On expressions such as It is clear that . . . 53 28 Use accurate terms having clear referents 54 29 Always look for the contrast term 55 30 Watch out for mysterious agents 55 3.3 Substantive Advice 55 31 Never quote the instructor 55 32 Never quote the dictionary 56 3.4 A Few Frequently Misused Terms 56 33 Philosophy vs. view vs. opinion 56 34 Concept vs. conception 57 35 Think vs. feel 58 36 Statement vs. argument 59 37 Sound, valid, and true 59 4 Explaining Philosophical Texts 60 38 Make sense out of the text as a whole 60 39 Make sense out of the main arguments in a text 62 40 Every quotation requires explanation 63 41 Every quotation requires specifi c attribution 64 42 The consistent and meaningful use of technical terminology 66 5 The Rudiments of Academic Research 67 43 Use the library, not the Web 67 44 Primary sources are your primary responsibility 69 45 What kind of secondary sources should be used and how? 70 Part II: Doing Philosophy 73 6 Academic Integrity 75 6.1 Know Your School's Honor Code and its Policies Regarding Plagiarism 75 6.2 What is Plagiarism? 75 6.3 How to Avoid Plagiarism 76 6.4 Proper Attribution Bolsters One's Scholarly Credibility 77 6.5 Cheaters are Likely to be Caught 77 7 How to Succeed in a Philosophy Course 79 7.1 Practice the Intellectual Virtue...
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