Argument Requirements
Argument
According to rhetoricians Timothy W. Crusius and Carolyn E. Channell, "Argument is the process of making what we think clear to ourselves and to others. It takes us from a vague, private viewpoint to a clearly stated position that we can defend publicly in speech or writing." They add, "Argument in this sense of seeking clarity has a two-part form or structure: (1) the statement of an opinion and (2) the statement of one or more reasons for holding that opinion" (3). In other words, they say, "Argument is not in itself an end or purpose of communication, It is rather a means of discourse, developing what we have to say".
Audience
When you don't know your audience personally, assume that:
They are thoughtful people of good will who might be persuaded by clear and cogent arguments.
They are not as familiar with the material as you, so you will need to explain concepts and terms as well as what the problem/issue is.
They have not read the texts you have in class, so you need to provide background information and establish context for what you say.
They do not know your thesis, so you must tell them your thesis early in the essay so they will know how to interpret what you say.
Some of your readers are skeptical about your thesis before they read your essay.
Some of your readers are undecided about the issue.
Because some of your readers do not know you personally, you must prove to them that you are a thoughtful, intelligent person who has carefully considered all sides of the issue before writing the essay.
You must explain your opponents' major arguments and then demonstrate that their arguments are flawed (i.e., refute them).
If an opponents' point is not flawed, you must concede the point explicitly and then try, if possible, to minimize the importance of that point.
You must treat your opponents and readers with respect, showing that you realize that they too are intelligent people of good will.
You must explain your reasons and evidence fully, always giving the credentials of authorities that you quote.
At least one of your readers is your professor, and he/she probably has particular goals for any writing assignment-- e.g., he/she probably wants you to demonstrate knowledge of some particular material, the ability to analysis and interpret that material, the ability to manipulate that material into a convincing argument. To accomplish these tasks, you need to explain concepts and show your logical thought processes (how you got from point A to point R); think of it as analogous to doing a math problem-- the professor wants to see your "work" (the process you used to get to the answer), not simply the answer itself.
Goal
Your ultimate goal is to win belief rather than simply win the argument. So your argument's primary goal is always to persuade readers that your position is the most viable, logical, moral, and practical. This can be accomplished:
by accommodating your readers (some of whom are always skeptical).
by exploring both sides of the argument.
by revealing the flaws in the assumptions, reasons, and evidence of the opposition (e.g., by refuting the opposition's main points).
by explicitly stating and exploring your own assumptions and major reasons for adopting your position.
by supporting and proving your reasons with explicit evidence.
by using various types of evidence including expert testimony, statistics, logical demonstration, personal experiences, real life examples (from current affairs or history), fictional examples (from novels, plays, movies, TV), hypothetical examples, legal documents and concepts, codes of conduct.
by using logical, ethical, and emotional appeals.
by using all the resources of rhetoric.
Content
Your topic must be a thorny one, one that is complicated and for which there is no easy solution. If you cannot see the value of arguments on both sides of the issue, select another issue. If you are not personally conflicted about the issue, select another topic. Writing this essay should help you clarify your ideas and to recognize the difficulties of finding any answer to the issue: Do not select a topic about which you believe you already know the truth and "have the answer"- such a topic will result in a high-school-level essay. Ideas must be developed, explored, examined, analyzed, and prodded.
You must engage with the opposition.
You should "stay with" each idea beyond your mere assertion of it.
You need to consider and explore the implications of your idea and see at what point you might no longer support that idea (e.g., "turn the other cheek" is a saintly idea, but does it have a limit? Does it mean, for instance, that if Q murders someone, we should "turn the other cheek" and not punish him and, in fact, should offer ourselves as his next victim?).
You also need to consider what opponents to your thesis would say about your idea, what objections they would raise to it, and then you need to answer those objections-- do all this within your argument so your readers can follow the process.
You need to prove your assertions with evidence (e.g., expert testimony, statistics, facts, hypothetical and real life examples, logical demonstration).
Part of accommodating your audience is explaining all relevant concepts (e.g., if you invoke a concept such as utilitarianism, you must summarize explain the concept to your readers).
Your essay must have a clear and explicit thesis (your position on the issue) and must demonstrate a clear awareness of the opposition's counter-thesis.
In a full-fledged argument, your argument must explain both sides of the issue, building a case for your position by refuting and conceding the major points of the opposition as well as by giving your reasons and the evidence that supports them. In other words, you are making a claim (your position, your thesis) and arguing that it is true; conversely, you are producing reasons for the advocates of a competing claim (the counter-thesis) to abandon it in favor of yours. In yet other words, you must understand both positions well enough to appreciate the strengths and shortcomings of each.
If it helps, think of yourself as a defense attorney. You and the prosecutor have the same information (e.g., eyewitness accounts, forensic evidence) and know that there are conflicts (e.g., various accounts of where the accused was at the time of the crime). Yet each of you creates a different interpretation-- you draw different inferences and conclusions from the same data.
Your essay must be logical and must effectively use various types of evidence.
The ideas must be well developed- there must be evidence to support them and your exploration of the implications and limitations of your ideas.
Your essay should cause us to think about the issue more deeply than we ever have before.
Your essay must be interesting.
It must consider nuances of the issue, not merely trot out the same old arguments that you encountered in high school. It needs to display your critical thinking and analytical skills.
Your Position/Thesis
Most of us begin the argument process about a topic with our minds already made up, our position in mind (perhaps we are even totally committed to that position). Almost inevitably, that initial position is based on our core beliefs, upon unproven assertions and assumptions, and our position is rather general and sweeping. For example, we might feel that "all welfare should be abolished immediately." That is a very sweeping generalization. What can we do to deepen and refine that thesis?
One of the major purposes of doing research is to test our thesis against the best arguments of the opposition. For instance, our anti-welfare position might be based on the unproven belief that anyone receiving welfare is a lazy bum who doesn't want to work.
When our library research reveals evidence that some people on welfare are mentally incapable of holding a job, we might alter our position slightly to "We should abolish all welfare except that given to mentally incompetent people who have no one else to help them." Then, of course, we need to define the concept of "no one else to help them"- does that refer only to immediate family members? To charity groups?
But then we discover that many of the people that we assumed were "lazy bums" are actually holding full-time jobs but still cannot afford even to feed their families. They do not have the education or training to get jobs that pay above minimum wage. Perhaps our thesis is modified again to be "Welfare payments should go only to poor people who hold full-time jobs and those who are mentally incapable of working and have no one else to help them."
And then we learn that many of the biggest American corporations receive huge subsidies called "corporate welfare" and that the companies receive such gifts basically because they are already rich and hence have a great deal of political power. How does this new information impact on our thesis?
This active engagement with the opposition refines and deepens our thesis. Now our thesis might be metamorphosed into "People or companies should receive welfare payments only when they can prove serious need." And we would have to suggest ways that "serious need" could be "proven."
Research
Research has three primary purposes in writing: provide factual information, provide arguments for your position, and provide arguments against your position.
Crucial, but least important, is research intended to provide background information (the current situation, pending proposals or laws, suggested solutions, statistics).
Research that locates the logic behind your position and the reasons and extrinsic evidence (e.g., testimony, data) for your position is very important. Rarely can any one person think of all the reasons for supporting a position or find all the relevant evidence supporting those reasons. Even more rarely can only one person think of all the different strategies for approaching an issue or for attacking counter-theses and counter-positions.
Similarly, research is crucial that locates not only your opposition's arguments (e.g., major points, the moral and practical reasons for supporting it, evidence) but also the opposition's underlying assumptions.
Your essay must use appropriate research. Consult the reference librarian for help in locating sources.
Your essay must use all the resources available to you-- not only extrinsic proof (statistics, expert testimony, legal documents and concepts) but also intrinsic proof (e.g., hypothetical examples, historical and fictional examples, probabilities, analogies, maxims, commonplaces, logical demonstration).
Use the MLA in-text citation format and a Works Cited page (see the Writing Center's Web site for details).
Internet sources must be evaluated very carefully. There are 5 criteria for evaluating all sources: authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and coverage.
Arrangement
The essay must have an effective, clear, and logical structure. It must use transitional words, phrases, and devices to make explicit connections between ideas and between paragraphs. The organization exists to present your ideas in the most effective manner possible to your readers.
All academic essays have a beginning, middle, and end-- but that fact is not particularly useful in helping us organize our ideas.
It helps if we think in terms of sections.
In ancient rhetorical terms, your essay should have the following sections (in specific cases, some might be omitted or combined, depending upon your topic and audience). Unless you have a good reason for altering the order, however, you should probably follow this basic rhetorical structure developed by Cicero and Quintilian (the ancient rhetorical scheme is explained in history, 109):
Exordium (Introduction): The exordium is intended to make the audience willing to listen. Modern rhetorical theory says that, if possible, the introduction should do several things:
It should establish some connection between audience and rhetor (i.e., it should "predispose" audience to listen via ethos).
It establishes a sense of kairos for the readers (urgency).
It should hook the readers' attention.
It should announce your topic (the question your essay will answer or the issue that it will explore).
It should reveal what your approach to the topic will be.
It should establish what your primary tone will be.
It should usually start very close to your thesis (never start with "Since the beginning of recorded history....").
It often establishes the nature of the larger issue (your topic is an example of this larger issue-- e.g., the larger issue for the topic of abortion might "What are the limits of government intervention in our private decisions?" or it might be "How do we decide whose rights are more important when there is a conflict between the rights of different individuals?" or it might be "Do the ends always justify the means?"). When you establish this in the introduction, you will return to this larger issue in your conclusion.
It often forecasts what the organization of the essay will be.
Narratio (Background of the Issue)-- this section:
It gives your readers the relevant background information that they will need in order to understand the issue before you start the argument.
It includes up-to-date information about the current situation (e.g., pending legislation, proposed solutions).
It defines key terms that you will use and that readers might not know.
It explains why this situation/issue is a problem and for whom, explains any key concepts that are needed to understand the complexity of the issue, and it defines any key terms your readers might not know.
It states your position (thesis/claim).
Confirmatio (Proof)-- This section gives evidence to prove the claims made in the narratio:
It states your reasons for supporting your position.
It gives your evidence for each reason.
It anticipates your opponents' objections to your reasons and respond to those objections.
Confutatio or Refutatio (Refutation)-- This section answers the opposition's counter arguments:
It explains your opponents' main reasons and evidence for supporting that position.
It refutes (or occasionally concedes) those reasons and evidence.
Some modern rhetoricians advocate a dramatic, back-and-forth presentation of pros and cons rather than saving all the refutation for the last major body section.
Peroratio (Conclusion)-- This section demonstrates again the "full strength" of your argument. Modern rhetorical theory suggests that your conclusion should never be only a summary or repetition of your major points, although often you might touch on the major points you've made. Your conclusion should always include a "discovery," an opening up toward the world beyond the limits of your argument essay:
an explanation of some interesting implication of your position/thesis that you haven't yet discussed explicitly.
and/or an indication of what future thinking must be done.
and/or a suggestion of what new issues arise if your solution/position is adopted.
and/or an exploration of the implications of your argument and thesis for the larger issue that you mentioned in the introduction.
Rhetoric
The essay must demonstrate a grasp of the basic concepts and uses of rhetoric (e.g., audience accommodation, stasis, kairos, the commonplaces, logos, pathos, ethos, urgency, stylistic devices).
Style Guidelines
Write all college papers in academic English (assume that your readers are thoughtful professionals or pre-professionals).
Write reader-friendly prose (e.g., make connections between ideas explicit).
Make your prose concise, precise, accurate. clear, explicit, and interesting.
Use vivid and figurative language, particularly when developing pathetic proofs.
Display a sense of craft by varying sentence structures, sentence lengths, and First Elements.
Read your prose aloud to hear its rhythm.
Use memorable phrasings to state key ideas.
Use the stylistic resources of rhetoric and display a literary impulse.
Use correct grammar and mechanics.
Essay Level
On the essay level, academic prose tries to remain relatively objective. For example, "Avoid the first-person singular-- I, me, my-- and related phrases-- in my opinion, I think, I believe; they are rarely used, and, in much academic prose, they are actively avoided (exception: you should use first-person singular when you are discussing an experience that happened to you or when you are writing a persuasive personal essay)
Use the first-person plural: we, our, us-- these words are often preferred to the more formal and more distancing third person impersonal one (which should be avoided unless a professor or journal editor specifically requests that you use it). Using first-person pronouns has at least two added benefits- it connects you and the reader and it helps you avoid excessive use of the passive voice.
Avoid the second person you whenever possible- it drags your readers into your essay and thus, paradoxically, often pushes them away from your idea (e.g., by assigning ideas to your readers that they really don't believe-- "Although you see abortion as murder, ..."). It is always better to be more specific: say either "Pro-life advocates see abortion as murder" or "Opponents of abortion see it as murder".
Paragraph Level
On the paragraph level, academic prose requires that each paragraph develop one idea fully. In addition,
Give every paragraph an explicit topic sentence (95% of the time this is the first sentence in the paragraph). At times, however, there may be reasons for making it the last sentence in your paragraph.
Make sure that every sentence in that paragraph directly explains, supports, proves, illustrates, or qualifies the idea in the topic sentence. Nothing else belongs in that particular paragraph. Putting tangential material in a paragraph destroys coherence.
Develop each paragraph fully-- i.e., a paragraph that contains only 2 or 3 sentences is probably under-developed (unless it is a transitional paragraph or is summarizing ideas that came in earlier paragraphs).
Sentence Level
On the sentence level, academic prose requires complete sentences at least 98% of the time.
Use variety in sentence length (some sentences should be short, some medium, some long).
Use variety in sentence structure (there should be a mixture of simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences).
Use variety in First Elements.
Word Level
On the word choice level (diction), academic prose should sound professional but not pompous.
Use the "invisible contractions" (e.g., those contractions that contain not such as don't and can't).
Avoid other contractions (e.g., use I am and we could have, not I'm or we could've).
Avoid slang or catch-phrases from advertisements or songs.
Avoid jargon whenever possible (if you must use the specialized terminology of your discipline for an audience that may include non-specialists, always define the terms).
Never use a word found in a thesaurus without first checking the nuances of its meanings in a good dictionary.