Friday, April 20, 2012

Deadlines

Per our conversation this week, I will look for your completed essays on Friday, May 4th, before the departmental cookout that afternoon. Book analyses are of course due at the exam, which is 8am(!) on Thursday, May 10th.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Book Analysis Guidelines


I promised I would give you parameters for your book analyses later, and today is later.

Your analysis should be concise (less than five pages in manuscript format), thoroughly edited with respect to all items on the writing checklist (explaining in footnotes all stylistic deviations from those rules), and contain:
  • Your name, and the date (that of our final examination period, when the piece is due)
  • The title, author(s)/editor(s), publisher, and year of publication of the book
  • An opening paragraph identifying the central conceptual issues and claims which the book addresses
  • A prĂ©cis of the author’s positions and reasoning about those issues
  • A systematic comment on the author’s reasoning, noting what you take to be its most important strengths, as well as any significant weaknesses or oversights
Please edit out any popular review-y tics like how much you enjoyed the book, whether you'd recommend it to your friends, etc.

Friday, April 6, 2012

CRITO outlines

Good work on your drafts. Now I want you to do an analysis of your essay using the CRITO outline format below. You should probably be able to do it on a single page. Please let me have these by the end of next week.


Conclusion:  Begin by stating your central claim or thesis in the form of a declarative sentence (followed by a brief explanation of its terms, if necessary). Your conclusion (thesis) should be explicit and clear, substantive, particular, and the object of possible or actual reasoned debate.  It should be something you believe to be true, in which you have a genuine interest, and for which you think you can give compelling reasons. Often you won’t know exactly what your thesis is until you have written a very preliminary draft of the paper.

Reasons:  Summarize briefly each of the reasons (premises, evidence, examples...) you will muster in support of your conclusion. They should be collectively sufficient to convince a thoughtful reader of the truth (accuracy, credibility) of your thesis. State each one as a single, short, declarative sentence.

Inference:  Put the central argument of your essay into standard form (list each reason as a single statement, followed by the conclusion), so as to be certain that it is sufficient to constitute a valid deductive, or strong inductive, argument for your conclusion.

Truth:  Consider the probable truth or falsity of each of your reasons in turn, so as to assess the soundness (if deductive), or cogency (if inductive) of your central argument.

Objection:  As far as the argument proper is concerned, if you have satisfied C, R, I, and T, your work should be complete. However, it is possible (and in actual practice quite likely) that you have missed something: a different perspective from which some element of your argument may be wanting, or some crucial piece of overlooked evidence or interpretation. Therefore, it will strengthen your argument to give full and respectful consideration to the strongest possible objection you can raise to some aspect of your of it. Ask yourself: what if a reasonable and intelligent person thought your conclusion, or one of your reasons, or the inference itself, had somehow missed the mark?

After presenting the strongest possible objection to your argument and according it serious consideration by developing it fully and sympathetically, respond to it as completely and respectfully as you can. It is better to acknowledge that you cannot definitively answer an objection than to attempt to deny or avoid its force.