An introduction that focuses on the topic at hand instead of a collection of musings about the historical nature
REQUIREMENTS:
1. An introduction that focuses on the topic at hand instead of a collection of musings about the historical nature of the question, etc. An important goal of all philosophical writing is not to include content that doesn’t advance an argument. The introduction should have a clear and specific thesis statement that outlines what the reader can expect. Underline the thesis statement.
2. Explain the argument. This includes necessary concepts. For example, if you’re going to focus on natural evil, then it is probably a good idea to distinguish it from moral evil. However, there is no need to explain things like “this is an A Posteriori argument” and so forth.
3. After the argument has been captured in detail, it should arrive a particular conclusion (identify what it demonstrates or fails to demonstrate). Next, raise and answer potential objections to the argument. In other words, anticipate how someone might reasonably disagree, state that disagreement and respond to it. Discuss these matters at length. Each objection could be its own paragraph.
4. The conclusion should be a summary of your main argument and why the objections to your claim do not succeed. Wrap it up with some final thoughts on the merits of the argument itself.
essay_instructions_and_prompts___
Answer preview to an introduction that focuses on the topic at hand instead of a collection of musings about the historical nature
APA
1173 Words