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20 November 2001 |
On Writing a Philosophy Paper
Joel points to a wonderful article Guidelines On Writing a Philosophy Paper by the young Harvard philosphy professor James Pryor. An inspiring guide to any kind of writing:
"In fact, you can profitably take this one step further and pretend that your reader is lazy, stupid, and mean. He's lazy in that he doesn't want to figure out what your convoluted sentences are supposed to mean, and he doesn't want to figure out what your argument is, if it's not already obvious. He's stupid, so you have to explain everything you say to him in simple, bite-sized pieces. And he's mean, so he's not going to read your paper charitably. (For example, if something you say admits of more than one interpretation, he's going to assume you meant the less plausible thing.)"
11:16:33 AM
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© Copyright 2003 Matthew Blair.
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