How To Write A Philosophy Essay
How To Write A Philosophy Essay
Bibliography and Referencing:(standard footnote/endnote method) Alphabetise your bibliography by authors last name (single space entries, double space between entries). The following are standard formats for the bibliography. A book: Merton, Robert K. The Sociology of Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1973. An edited book: MacIntyre, A., ed. Hegel: A Collection of Critical Essays. London: University of Notre Dame Press, 1976. An article in a journal: Dove, Kenley R. Hegels Phenomenological Method, Review of Metaphysics 23 No. 1 (Sept., 1969), pp. 615-41. An essay or article in a book (by same author): Adorno, T. Skoteinos, or How to read Hegel, in Hegel: Three Studies (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993), pp. 89-148. An article in an edited collection: Harris, H. S. Hegels intellectual development to 1807, in The Cambridge Companion to Hegel, edited by F. C. Beiser (Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 25-51. Any claim you make in your text that is not your own idea must be referred to the relevant source. You may do this by putting the reference in parentheses at the end of the passage or by using a footnote. (Your computers word processor will have an Insert Footnote/Endnote command that will take care of the numbering and location). Endnotes, if you use them, occur at the end of your main text, before the bibliography. Your first footnote reference gives the full source (omitting the publisher) and the page referred to. The authors last name comes first in a bibliography; in footnotes then normal order prevails. 1 John Diamond, The Third Chimpanzee (London, 1983), p. 199. Where no confusion can arise (for example, where references are on the same page), subsequent references to the same book use ibid. (in the same place), followed by the page number. If intervening references to other works occur, use op. cit. (in the work quoted); however, do not send the reader back too many pages - if in doubt, use a full reference. Instead of using ibid and op. cit it is permissible to use an abbreviated version of the full reference, e.g. Diamond, p. 31. Samples: 2 ibid., p. 103. [this is a reference to Diamonds book, above.] 3 Harry Loner, Justice in a Lonely World, Philosophy and Public Affairs, 8 (3) (Oct. 1978), p. 4. 4 John Diamond, op. cit., p. 56. 5 Diamond, p. 31 All INTERNET references must be cited using the full and accurate address! Cite the authors name (if known), document title in quotation marks, the date visited, and the full HTTP or URL address: e.g., http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/1pb/mud-history.html (5 Dec. 1994).
3. OTHER TIPS and STRATEGIES Make your essay as concise and incisive as possible. Write a first draft that is longer than the required length and then delete anything irrelevant or superfluous to your main purpose. You need to go beyond simply reporting or paraphrasing what a philosopher said. If you assert that a philosopher holds a specified view, establish your claim on the basis of evidence (detailed analysis of passages is useful). And you need to go beyond simply reporting how you yourself feel about the matter: back up your claims with reasons and evidence, and fend off possible objections. Finally, you need to go beyond simply displaying what various commentators think about the topic. Do use secondary sources, of course, but ultimately your tutor or lecturer is interested in your best reasons for adopting your conclusion. If you quote be careful to use the exact words and punctuation of the original text! Give the appropriate page references. If you add italics that are not in the quote itself, insert emphasis [or italics] added after your page reference; for example: " " (Putnam, 1985a, p. 17; italics added). If you insert a clarifying phrase in a quote, use square brackets: [clarifying phrase] to indicate that the addition is not in the original. Use ellipses for omissions: (3 dots only, not ..; however, use 4 dots if the omitted material includes a full stop). Whenever you use a quotation from an author, always explain, analyse, or comment upon the claims made in the quote. Better still, put the philosophers ideas into your own words and then relate the ideas to your wider argument. 4. Features that make a GOOD paper (i) Clarity. Assume that the reader of your papers knows less than you. Take pains to make your meaning as clear as possible. It is helpful to provide relevant examples that illustrate your points. Use your own words; avoid artificial, technical or convoluted language. (ii) Accuracy. Be sure that you know and render the precise claim or argument or view that a philosopher intends or is committed to before you go on to evaluate it. (iii) Reflection. Your writing should manifest careful, reflective thinking carried on in an imaginative and critical frame of mind. Probe the issue at hand so as to stretch yourself intellectually. It is better to delve deeply into one aspect of a problem than to address several aspects superficially. (iv) Organisation. Try to order the expression of your thoughts in such a way that they build upon what comes before and support what comes after so that nothing irrelevant to the matter at hand remains to interrupt the flow. Ensure that it always is clear to the reader just what the current point is and how it relates to what youve done and are about to do. (v) Argument. This is the most central feature of a philosophy paper. Try to satisfy yourself that you have succeeded in showing that everyone ought to believe what you in fact do believe (and where you do not feel satisfied, say so, and try to indicate why). To accomplish this, always establish your points by providing good reasonsthe most relevant and persuasive ones you can think of, structured as rigorously and incisively as you canin support of your views.
essay will exemplify these characteristics very well and also include some interesting insights, research, or interpretations. A first-class essay is one that succeeds in providing a particularly strong and insightful defence of an interesting thesis.