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Retell the story of the Ring of Gyges. What point is Plato trying to make with that story? Do you agree or disagree with that point?

Writing Tips

Think of the CAP as a well-researched persuasive/argumentative paper.  Imagine that you are trying to persuade an intelligent, but uninformed reader of your conclusion, which is encapsulated in your thesis statement.  The last sentence of your introductory paragraph should be your thesis statement.  A common problem that I see is that the thesis statement is way too broad.  Be sure to narrow it down sufficiently to write a well-written paper in 4-6 pages.
The paper should consist of the reasoned defense of some claim, which is stated in your thesis statement.
A good paper is modest and makes a small point; but it makes that point clearly and straightforwardly, and it offers good reasons in support of it.
Make the structure of your paper obvious.  Include a short outline of the main points of your paper.
Be concise, but explain yourself fully.

Some Possible Writing Strategies

The paper has to do substantive work, not merely regurgitate an authors main points (although, of course, it is important for you to restate an authors position before criticizing it).  Some possibilities are:
Criticize an argument; or show that certain arguments for the thesis are no good.
Defend the argument or thesis against someone else’s criticism.
Offer reasons to believe the thesis.
Offer counterexamples to the thesis.

Requirements of the Paper

You must cite at least two academic sources (such as journal articles, books, websites, etc.).  Make sure those sources are academically reputable.  Since web addresses change constantly, you can find the website by googling its name.  Be careful of satire websites or fake news.  Some good websites include the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Philosophers Imprint, and the numerous electronic databases that the school library carries.  Possible outside sources include books, journal articles, magazines, databases, Websites, videos, dictionaries, encyclopedias, and almanacs.  When possible, try to cite from recent sources. Make sure you evaluate your online sources for trustworthiness and credibility.
Papers should either be in Microsoft Word format (.doc).  Upload to Canvas by the due date towards the end of the semester.
Four-to-six pages, double-spaced, Times New Roman font, 12-point, one-inch margins.
MLA or Chicago system of citation.
Include a cover page that contains the title of the paper, your name, my name, the date, and the class (e.g., PHIL 1301.710 or MW 10:10 AM). 
Include a short outline of the main points of your paper and include it after the title page.
You are allowed to write in the first person.
Sample Footnotes (For those following the Chicago Manual of Style)

Michael Shermer, The Science of Good and Evil:  Why People Cheat, Gossip,

Care, Share, and Follow the Golden Rule (New York:  Times Books, 2004), pp. 25-26.

Nadrian C. Seeman, Nanotechnology and the Double Helix, Scientific American

290 (June 2004):  64-75.

Philip B. Kurland and Ralph Lerner, eds., The Founders Constitution (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 2000), chap. 9, doc. 3, http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/.

Shermer, Good and Evil, 25.

Seeman, Nanotechnology, 64.

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