Your paper will have two main sections: (1) a summary of the authors argument for their
conclusion and (2) your defense of this argument or your rejection of this argument. Your paper
should also have a very short introduction and a conclusion.
*As a general policy, you may quote the readings or the slides, but quotations cannot be more
than 2 lines of text at any given point in your paper.
III. What Each Section Should Look Like:
i. The Introduction:
Your introduction should be pretty minimal. Same with the conclusion. The intro should look
very much like the following:
In this paper, I will summarize and critique William Rowes argument that God exists.
First, I will summarize Rowes argument for this conclusion. Second, I will consider
objections to Rowes argument.
ii. The Summary Section (about 1,000 words):
In your summary section, you should explain the authors argument for his or her conclusion.
Theres no need to summarize the parts of the article that are not essential to the argument. You
are welcome to quote from the Power Point slides or the authors article so long as you cite them
properly. You should explain, in your own words, how the author defends each premise or their
argum
ent and how the premises lead to the conclusion.
iii. The Critique/Defense Section (about 1,000 words):
Depending on your goals, you will either use this section to argue against the authors view, or
you will use it to defend the authors view.
If you are arguing against the authors view, you should consider one objection to the authors
view. You should say how the author would respond to this objection, and you should say why
this response is not satisfactory.
If you are defending the authors conclusion, you should do roughly the same thing. You should
pose an objection to the authors view, defend his/her view from this objection, and so on.
The best papers will consider a strong objection to the authors view. We want to object to the
strongest possible version of the argument, and we want to use the strongest possible responses
from the author. Otherwise, were only defeating or defending a straw-person version of the
argument.
If you think that an objection from a different author is applicable to the author that you are
writing about, then you are welcome to use it. But, you are not required to use objections from
the other authors in our class. You are welcome to use your own objections.