USE THE LINK BELOW TO GET TO THE READING- THIS READING IS WHAT THE ESSAY WILL BE ABOUT 🙂 INSTRUCTIONS ALSO BELOW
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/the-case-for-reparations/361631/
Each of our assigned readings offers arguments. For example, Ta-Nehisi Coates argues that the United States owes reparations to black citizens for a pattern of injustices. The readings for this essay will be anything prior to 2/18 (see the syllabus). You may discuss (critically or constructively) one argument from this time period (readings on reparations and anything prior).
An outline of what your paper should look like:
1. Introduction paragraph: Very briefly introduce the topic. What will you explain? Thesis statement: what you will argue for and how.
Thesis statement: I will show that ____’s argument that ___ should be rejected. I will support my claim by showing that ___’s premise that ___ is false. I will show that it is false by ____(giving empirical evidence, a counterexample, an analogy, a thought experiment, etc)___.
Examples: “I will argue that taxation is always unjust. I will support my claim by showing that taxes aim for a pattern of wealth distribution, which disrupts people’s life plans.”
“I will offer a reason to reject the principle of utility. My reason to reject the principle is that it allows that the happiness of some can outweigh the pain of others. I offer the example of capitalists’ and landholders’ happiness outweighing and justifying the misery of the poor if it is the case that capitalist economies maximize aggregate happiness.”
2. Exposition section: Explain the author’s (Reed, Gutmann, Appiah, and so on) main argument that you will criticize, focusing on the premise you will criticize (or defend).
3. Argument Section: support your conclusion with one strong reason. Arguments are composed of a series of premises (evidence) that supports a conclusion. Each paragraph should be a defense of one premise (usually). The premises together should support the conclusion. You should not have a paragraph that supports some other consideration. For example, if you are supporting the claim that utilitarianism allows sacrifices of some people for the happiness of others, each of your paragraphs should support a premise that supports your conclusion. You should not, for instance, have a paragraph explaining that utilitarianism ALSO does not care directly about distributions of goods (e.g., wealth).
In short, focus on criticizing (or defending) ONE premise. Only offer ONE criticism (or novel reason supporting) of the premise. When writing your ONE criticism (or defense), think of potential ways the author (or someone who disagrees) can reply to you and try to block these potential criticisms. Alternatively, you can respond directly to potential criticisms.
Length: approximately 500-800 words