Friday 2 December 2016

How to Write a Philosophy Essay: Rules

What is philosophy, and how is it to be prepared? The answer is difficult. Writing Philosophical essays is different from the writing another essays. A good quality philosophy essay is self-effacing and makes a small point; but it makes that point evidently and easily, and it offers excellent reasons in support of it.

Many people find the thought of writing philosophy intimidating, but it doesn’t have to be that way. We’ve put together some rules to help you understand what a good philosophy essay is, and how to write one. We’ll take you through what preparation you need to do and how you need to structure your essay and we’ll give you some tips on how to avoid some common errors. Some of the rules apply to good essay writing in any subject and others apply specifically to philosophy.

1. Make out the study material

Time spent planning is always time well spent. Work out what the question is asking for, and from that, work out which parts of the study material you will need to focus on. Then re-read the study material, making a note of where you will be able to find stuff that is useful for your answer .And although you need to show familiarity with the study material, your tutor will not be looking for mere regurgitation. Read on to find out what they will be looking for.

2. Write a prepared essay plan

Before writing, plan out what you want to say and what order you want to say it in. Get this bit right and the actual writing should be plain sailing. The structure of your essay will depend in part on the question asked and in part on how you set about answering it. But typically you’ll need to have sections where you present someone’s view, and sections in which you assess that view, giving your own view in the process. One thing you need to be absolutely sure of is that your essay plan addresses the question asked, and that you’re not going to be going off on an irrelevant tangent.

3. Declare what you are going to do

Write an introductory paragraph laying out what you’re going to do. You don’t have many words, so keep this short. State your conclusion, and spell out the various stages of your argument. This provides your reader with a map of what they can expect when they read the essay and it also inspires confidence that you know what you are doing.

4. Argue to your conclusion

The introduction was where you said what you are going to do. Now is where you start to do it, and the key word in this rule is ‘argue’. The conclusion you decide to defend matters less than how well you defend it. The tutor reading your essay is going to be looking for convincing arguments. With a solid essay plan, the arguments you need to make your case can just be written out. In reality complications or changes of mind nearly always emerge as you go along, so you’ll need to adapt when things don’t go quite to plan.

5. Notice your argument

A car journey is less stressful if, at any time in the journey, you know where you are going, and the same is true for reading a philosophy essay. So as well as arguing to a conclusion, you need to let your reader know where they are in your argument. Sentences such as the following can be useful: ‘Having shown that such and such, I will now show that so and so or ‘Smith has two arguments for this position. In the first he says this and in the second he says that.

6. Write visibly and concisely

Philosophy is complex enough as it is, so aim for a straightforward style in which you say what needs to be said in as clear a way as possible before moving on to the next point. Novels and poems call for an evocative style. In philosophy the opposite holds: you want your reader to be focusing on what you say, not on how you say it. Ideally, the reader won’t even notice the style.

7. Rephrase your final essay.

Before submitting your essay, read it through and check for the various pitfalls we have mentioned. Does everything you have written play a role in the argument? Is there repetition? Would an example help? Is the structure and content as clear as it could be? It helps your reader if you write clearly, concisely and elegantly. Watch out for ill-formed sentences and for grammatical or spelling errors.



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