Work101
Everything in pdf
3 years ago
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Firstessayquestions.docx
FirstEssayinstruction.pdf
- Aristotle-readings.pdf
- Readings-Theallegoryofthecave.pdf
- Firstreadings-bookIoftheRepublic.pdf
- Aristotle-Secondreadings.pdf
- Secondreadings-bookII-IVoftheRepublic.pdf
Firstessayquestions.docx
1. Why do Glaucon, Adeimantus, and Socrates decide to describe an imaginary city in the Republic? What are the successive steps of their arguments and what do they conclude?
2. What is Plato’s allegory of the cave? What is he trying to say with this story?
3. How does one achieve happiness, according to Aristotle? And what is the importance of habits and virtues in achieving happiness?
4. What is the virtuous legislator according to Aristotle? If the legislator lives in one of Aristotle’s imperfect regimes, what should the legislator try to reform?
5. What are Aquinas’ four types of law? How does Aquinas’ political theory helps reconcile Aristotle’s philosophy with Christianity?
FirstEssayinstruction.pdf
First Essay • The essay will have several questions: two questions on Plato, two on Aristotle, one on Aquinas
• You pick one question and write at least 500 words (there is no upper limit)
• The essays must have an introduction, a development, and a conclusion
• The main objective of these essays is to show me that you are thinking through the ideas we
saw in our classes and in the texts
• I really want you to not to just repeat what is on the PowerPoints
• Repeating is not the problem in itself. The problem is not having a broader argument. If you’re just
repeating without a broader argument, you’re not showing me that you are thinking through the material. 2
First Essay • How to answer?
• First, you contextualize the question
• Why is this important? Where does it come from? There’s not one way to contextualize a question.
• Some people introduce with historical facts, others with conceptual arguments, others with a parallel,...
• The important thing is that it has to be connected to your response. It’s not a place to drop random facts and then
move on. It sets the scene for your answer.
• Second, you answer the question
• Your answer grows naturally out of your introduction. It connects with it.
• It’s not a place to copy-paste or just state facts.
• You have to explain , in your own words, what is happening. 3
First Essay • How to answer? • Third, you conclude the question
• You tie the introduction and the answer in a conclusion.
• There’s not one way to write a conclusion
• Here, don’t just state facts or write personal impressions
• Rather, ground these facts and impressions in a way that is relevant to this class
• So: don’t say “I find Plato interesting” but say “To conclude, I will briefly argue that Plato’s
political thought is interesting because it contrasts so clearly with Aristotle’s.” 4
First Essay • Rubrics: • Do you answer the question?
• Does your answer have a broader point?
• Do you “fact-drop”? (= stating facts without an underlying reasoning/broader argument)
• Are the three parts of the essay organically connected?
• Is the answer clear, comprehensible, and are the arguments clearly articulated?
• Originality (in the next slide, I give some tips on how to give original answers) • Some ideas on how to earn the originality rubric :
• Giving your opinion in a grounded and relevant way
• Giving original examples, parallels, hypotheses
•
Concrete examples from real life?
•Comparing two or more authors
•Suggesting a new question (send me an email beforehand!)
•Bringing new ideas and notions from primary and secondary sources, and relating it to the
material of the class
•Criticizing or critically addressing the ideas of the class
•When you criticize, what matters is not whether I agree with you. The important thing is that you must always
justify your critiques, preferentially with secondary sources. Show me your reasoning.
•Small critiques are usually safer than big critiques. Big critiques require more justification. 6
•You can quote the readings. But don’t forget: the quote has to make sense
and tie to what you’re saying before and after the quote.
•You can’t overquote to fill your wordcount
• Don’t forget to explore the secondary literature: • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://plato.stanford.edu/
•
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://iep.utm.edu/
•Check the syllabus for more secondary literature
•If you quote a primary or secondary text, insert a simple footnote:
•Ex.: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Rosa Luxemburg”
•Ex.: G. D. H. Cole, A History of Socialist Thought , Volume 2, 1981, p. 253
•How to cite: https://politics.ucsc.edu/undergraduate/chicago%20style%20guid e.pdf 8
Careful when you copy paste in your essay! The software thinks it’s plagiarism
• Don’t use AI for your essay. The software is regularly updated together to keep
up with updated versions of other AIs.
• This class is writing-intensive. The idea of this class is to learn how to write and
to familiarize yourself with political concepts.
• AI has a lot of issues: it creates false facts, doesn’t engage with the ideas we saw
in class, doesn’t cite the secondary literature when it says a fact we haven’t seen
in class...
• The idea of these essays is to show me that you’re thinking through the material we saw in
class