PHIL 1301 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Dualism (Philosophy Of Mind), Hard Copy

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Make the i(cid:374)tro (cid:448)er(cid:455) (cid:271)ori(cid:374)g a(cid:374)d dr(cid:455) (cid:894)tell reader e(cid:454)a(cid:272)tl(cid:455) (cid:449)hat (cid:455)ou(cid:859)re going to do in the paper(cid:895) . a(cid:374)d the(cid:374) i(cid:859)(cid:373) go(cid:374)(cid:374)a argue (cid:271)lah (cid:271)lah (cid:271)lah. Use (cid:858)i(cid:859) to represent your arguments, use present tense for (cid:449)hat (cid:455)ou(cid:859)re argui(cid:374)g. Explain that argument, why do you find it most compelling, and its implications for what you can know. Explain that objection and why you find it most compelling. Argumentative paper: give a thesis in introduction. Be as clear and precise as possible (explain terminology) Review some resources listed about how to write a paper in philosophy: conclusion very much like introduction, but past tense and introducing new points that come up. Referencing: no material beyond course material in text citations (clark and chalmers, 1998, p. 11, provide a bibliography, do(cid:374)(cid:859)t (cid:374)eed to use outside readi(cid:374)gs! But (cid:272)ite the(cid:373) if (cid:455)ou do: some outside sources: stanford encyclopedia, internet encyclopedia of.

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