Up
to this point we have been concentrating on the overall logic of an argument. The
emphasis has been on developing a clear logical framework for the argument, in
the form of a detailed outline, so that you know from the start the central
claim of the essay and the way in which each paragraph will contribute to that
argument.
If
you can now formulate a clear focus, thesis, and sequence of topic sentences,
then your essay will have a firm logical framework. It will be clear what you are
trying to achieve and how you are proposing to achieve the argumentative point
of the essay or speech. No matter what you write further, if you stick to the
outline you have proposed and if it is a good one, the reader will be clear
about the purpose and direction of the argument. Now, we must turn to the
matter of the specific details of the argument which will turn that framework
and intention into a convincing complete argument.
The
next two sections focus on the paragraphs which you construct on the basis of
the topic sentences you have established for the main body of the argument. That
is, they discuss various ways in which the particular details of the argument,
which flesh out the outline you have drawn up, can be constructed.
This
section deals primarily with those paragraphs which will make up the main body
of the argument in a short essay. In a later section we will discuss further
some paragraphs that you may need to write as part of the definition of the
argument or as ways to supplement the argument in a longer research paper.
7.1 Paragraphs in the Main Body of the Argument
Once
you have defined an argument and settled on an outline for the main body, you
then need to construct the details of that argument, paragraph by paragraph. If
you have thought carefully about the series of topic sentences and have written
them down in sequence, then you should know how you intend to proceed. These
topic sentences in the outline will form the opening sentences for each
paragraph of the argument.
The
key principle to bear in mind, as you set out on the argument, is that any
single paragraph can deal with only one item: the argumentative point
established in the topic sentence. Hence, the major purpose of the paragraph is
to provide the argumentative details which will make that topic sentence
persuasive to the reader. That means, in effect, that each paragraph forms a
sub-argument related to the main thesis; it advances a point in support of that
thesis and argues it.
The
argument in the paragraph will be either a deductive argument, an inductive
argument, or, less commonly, a combination. What that means is that in each
paragraph you will either establish a common and agreed upon general principle
and apply it to a specific case, to produce a deductive conclusion, or you will
provide facts, research data, quotations from the text
and produce an inductive conclusion.
Here
are two examples of paragraphs taken from the main body of an argument against
capital punishment. Each has a clear topic sentence, and each conducts the
reader to a conclusion at the end which reinforces and repeats the topic
sentence. Notice that the first has a deductive structure (no collected
information is introduced; the argument comes entirely from principles), and
the second has an inductive structure (note that the statistics and the
references in the second are fictional; they are there only as examples of the
style).
Sample Paragraph A
The
first compelling argument against capital punishment is that it is morally
indefensible. If we consider the argument from a Christian standpoint, we have
the prohibition on killing in the Ten Commandments. In addition, we learn from
the Bible that vengeance belongs to the Lord. However we describe capital
punishment, it clearly involves killing another human being and, in many cases,
assuming responsibility for avenging the death of someone else. From the point
of view of secular human rights, too, there are many principles in place which
encourage us to agree that the deliberate taking of a human life, especially in
circumstances where the person killed is defenceless against the invincible
power of the state and where the state's action constitutes cruel and unusual
punishment, is morally wrong. It may well be that our feelings are often
outraged at the particular barbarity of the original murder, that the guilt of
the murderer is beyond doubt, that he or she shows no signs of repentance, and
that society carries a considerable cost for incarcerating a murderer for life,
all that may be true. None of it, however, removes from us the awareness that
for a group of rational human beings to sanction the state killing of an
individual, especially when there is no immediate threat to any other
individual or to the state collectively, is never morally justifiable. (226
words)
Sample Paragraph B
The
argument that we need capital punishment in order to reduce the cost of
maintaining the penal system is quite misplaced. There is no evidence that
executing murderers will save us money. A number of studies of this question
have shown that, on average, it costs about $50,000 per year to keep a maximum
security offender in jail (Schneider, 1990; Ross and Sinclair 1996). A person
who serves, say, a 25-year sentence, therefore, costs the state about
$1,250,000. However, in countries which show some concern about the rights of
the accused to a full and fair process, a system which has capital punishment
for murder requires far more elaborate trials and a much lengthier and more
expensive appeal process for capital offences than for non-capital offences. In
addition, the cost of the execution itself is not insignificant. Recent studies by Gardner (1998)
have shown that in the United
States the cost of the various judicial
processes and of the execution for convicted murderers is up to 30
percent higher than the cost of keeping them in jail for life. Other similar
studies by McIntyre (1990) and Jackson (1995) have come to the same conclusion.
There is, in other words compelling reason seriously to question one of the
most frequent claims made in support of capital punishment: that it will reduce
costs significantly. In fact, if saving money is the main concern in the penal
system, we should get rid of capital punishment immediately. (244 words)
Both
of these paragraphs are opposing capital punishment. The first is arguing
deductively. It does not appeal to facts but to agreed principles which it
applies to the example of capital punishment. The second is arguing
inductively. It presents information, data, statistics gathered by research.
Notice
that each paragraph begins with a clear topic sentence which announces the
opinion being presented in the paragraph, and each finishes by bringing the
reader back to that opinion. And each paragraph is substantial, more than 200
words. It deals with the point thoroughly.
7.2 Paragraphs Making Inductive Argument
Most
of the argumentative paragraphs you write will resemble the second example
above, that is, they will be presenting inductive arguments, based upon
evidence. As we have already discussed, the strength of this argument is going
to depend, in part, upon the nature of the evidence you present. No inductive
argument which lacks reliable evidence will be persuasive.
Sources of Evidence
Evidence
comes from many places, depending upon the nature of the argument you are
making. Here are some of the principal sources for evidence in inductive
arguments:
1.
In essays on literature, the evidence comes almost entirely from the text of
the work you are evaluating, that is, from the words on the page. Hence, an
important principle in writing convincing arguments about literature is
sticking closely to the text and anchoring what you have to argue on specific
details which are really in the text, either with direct references to such
details or with quotations.
2.
Essays about films or the fine and performing arts get their evidence from what
the work itself contains. For instance, a film or a CD review should base
itself closely on what people actually see and hear. A review of a painting or
an art exhibition bases itself what is in the art works.
3.
Evidence can also come from your own research, that is, from data you yourself
have collected as part of field work (e.g., questionnaire results) or
experimental data you have collected in the laboratory.
4.
Evidence also comes from secondary sources, that is, from books, articles,
reports about the subject you are discussing. This is particularly the case in
social science and science arguments (like the second example in Section 7.1
above) and in research papers generally. In using such evidence, as we have
mentioned before, it is important that you select an up-to-date and reliable
source (and one that is recognized as reliable).
Evidence
does not come from sources which cannot be checked (for example, imagined
details of a fictional story or unacknowledged secondary sources or subjective
recesses of the writer's memories) or vague appeals to unspecified authorities
or named celebrities.
Interpreting Evidence
A
really important principle of inductive arguments is the following: Evidence by
itself is rarely persuasive, unless the writer interprets the significance of
that evidence. In other words, once you have placed some facts into the
argument, you must discuss those facts to show how they establish the point you
are arguing in the paragraph.
This
is a crucial point, especially in arguments about literature. It is never
enough in a paragraph arguing about a point in literature simply to offer a
quotation from the text or a series of such quotations. While such evidence is
essential, it is unpersuasive unless the writer then interprets that evidence,
that is, offers a discussion about what the quotation contains which suggests
that the point of view advanced in the paragraph is valid.
The
same point holds for statistical evidence. Simply presenting a table of data,
for example, in support of an argumentative point is not very persuasive,
unless, immediately after the table, the writer then directs the reader's
attention at those details in the table which are relevant and explains how
they support the argumentative point which the paragraph is trying to make.
Here
is an example of a paragraph from an essay on Hamlet in which the writer
is presenting an inductive argument, using details from the text to support a
claim about the play. Notice that the argument does not just offer evidence; it
interprets that evidence to show how it helps to endorse the claim made in the
topic sentence:
Hamlet's
opening soliloquy in 1.2 reveals immediately that he is in a very peculiar
emotional state, in contrast to everyone else at court. The prevailing sense is
clearly that of a personality morbidly obsessed with death and preoccupied in a
most unhealthy way with female sexuality. The emphasis on death comes out
clearly in the references to suicide (129-132). And there runs throughout the
speech a sense of hatred for fertility and sexuality in the world. Notice
especially the following lines:
'Tis an unweeded garden That grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature
Possess it merely. (135-137)
Here
we see what later emerges as a characteristic tendency in Hamlet to reduce
human experience to the lowest, most unsatisfactory terms. For him life is a
"garden," but he rejects all the conventionally pleasant (even paradisal) associations of that term, by seeing the place
as "unweeded," a place where vigorous and
unchecked wild nature has taken over in a riot of reproductive energy. The
adjectives "rank" and "gross" convey a strong sense of
disgust, with marked sexual undertones, and the last word in the sentence,
"merely," sounds almost like a sneer. If we recognize from his
refusal to participate in the action at the court a sense that he is, right at
the start of the play, alienated from the social life of the court, then his
manner of expressing himself to himself, that is, of thinking aloud, creates an
initial feeling of an overreaction arising from some desire to see the worst. It
is true that Hamlet has just lost his father, and his mother has remarried his
uncle. But this does not appear to upset anyone else unduly, so the very strong
language he uses here to express his deepest thoughts immediately conveys to
the reader the suggestion of an unhealthy and excessively morbid response to
loss. (302 words)
Notice
that in the above paragraph the writer has selected a few details from a
particular part of the text and drawn the attention of the reader to them. But
she has not simply left the evidence there for the reader to figure out. She
takes almost all the second half of the paragraph to comment on the evidence
she has introduced, explaining to the reader how it brings out the point which
she has announced as the topic for the paragraph (i.e., interpreting the
evidence).
Make
quite sure you understand this point. Evidence requires interpretation which
links the facts to the point being made in the topic sentence of the paragraph.
It will not satisfactorily carry the argument unless the writer makes this
connection for the reader. Thus, if your inductive arguments merely present
evidence, with no interpretation, they will not be very persuasive, no matter
how much evidence you introduce, because the reader will fail to understand the
ways in the which the evidence substantiates the
points you are trying to establish. Do not think that the quantity of evidence
(smothering the reader with quotations, statistics, and other data) will carry
the argument without your interpretative explanations.
Now,
interpretation is something students tend at first to find difficult (hence
they tend to supply far too much evidence without discussion). Interpretation
requires an educated response to data (an eye for significant detail) and a
suitable vocabulary to express that response. Hence, much of the work in undergraduate
courses involves educating students in ways of interpreting the data most
relevant to the field of study. And if your arguments are going to be at all
persuasive in the details you present, you have to learn how to carry out such
interpretation.
Once
you begin to grasp and to practice this principle of interpreting the evidence
you introduce, you should be using up most of the paragraph for this purpose
(as in the above example). And your argumentative style will begin to change,
so that you introduce less evidence but discuss in greater detail the evidence
you do introduce.
When
students complain, as they often do, of not having enough to say about a
particular topic, of having said all they have to say and still having many
hundreds of words to complete the requirements of the argument, the reason is
always the same: there is insufficient interpretation. The essay may be
establishing good topic sentences and putting useful evidence on the table. But
a main part of the argument, the interpretation of evidence, is missing. By
contrast, students who learn to interpret properly then often face a problem of
not having enough space, since thorough interpretation takes up much of the
essay.
In
general, the best essays tend to be those with a relatively narrow focus, in
which the evidence presented is good evidence but not overwhelming in volume,
and in which the interpretation of the evidence presented is first-rate and
thorough. The quality of the interpretation, in fact, is one of the key
features characterizing an A essay.
7.3 Some Important Symptoms of Poor Argumentative Paragraphs
Given
the points mentioned above, you can often recognize quite easily by some
characteristic symptoms whether your essay is fulfilling the requirements of a
good inductive argument.
1.
If your paragraphs are quite short (i.e., less than, say, 150 words), then they
are almost certainly not carrying out a thorough argument. As should be clear
from the various examples given above, introducing the topic sentence,
presenting evidence, and interpreting the evidence in detail should take up a
substantial amount of space. So if, when you look at the visual appearance of
your essay, you notice that the paragraphs are changing very five or six lines,
then something is wrong. It most cases, the problem will be that you are not
doing enough interpretation.
2.
As you review your essay, look carefully at those places where you have quoted
some material, either from the text which is the subject of the argument or
from a secondary source. Ask yourself this question: What is going on in the
essay immediately after the quotation? If you are not at that point discussing
the significance of the quotation for the argument the paragraph is making
(i.e., interpreting the quotation), then you are probably neglecting an
essential part of the argument.
3.
Finally, how much of each paragraph is taken up with quotations from the text
or from secondary sources? If these make up the major part of the paragraph,
then you are probably overloading the argument with evidence and not providing
sufficient interpretation of the evidence. As a general rule, select the best
evidence available, and interpret it thoroughly, rather than trying to stuff
the essay with quotations.
7.4 Paragraph Unity
A
key characteristic of good paragraphs is that they exhibit unity, that is,
everything in the paragraph is linked directly to the main point announced in
the topic sentence. There are no digressions into other subjects or additional
points brought into the middle of the paragraph. Everything is relevant to the
single argumentative point of that paragraph.
Notice
in the following paragraph how the logic of the argument announced in the topic
sentence begins to go astray as soon as the writer introduces another point,
not directly linked to the topic:
Elisa's
main problem in this story is that she is uncertain about her femininity. We
sense this problem in the way she dresses, something emphasised in the opening
description of her. Her figure looks "blocked and heavy." She wears a
man's hat pulled low over her face. She does wear a dress, but that is almost
totally concealed under a heavy apron, so that we get the impression of a woman
who is hiding something, a sense that is strongly reinforced by the narrator's
description of her clothes as a "costume," something worn by actors
impersonating someone else. The setting also sound
quite isolated and lonely, as if there is no daily human contact with a
community of friends. And the fact that the story is set at a time when the
fields are "brown" and without a crop evidently coming to fruition, a
time of "waiting," creates a sense that Elisa has no immediate
fulfilment in her daily life. Elisa's conduct when the stranger arrives is thus
quite understandable; she is uncertain about how to deal with a sudden
intrusion, especially a strange man. All these details reveal clearly that
Elisa has some significant emotional insecurities.
This
paragraph begins by announcing a very specific topic, the relationship between
the description of Elisa's clothing and our sense of her uncertainty about her
femininity. And the first few details focus on that well, with evidence and
useful interpretation. But then the writer switches to something else (the
setting) and then, a bit later, to something else (the arrival of the
stranger). Hence, by the end the reader has lost contact with the specific
point announced at the start. Thus, the unity of this paragraph has
disappeared.
It
is important to concentrate on paragraph unity and to keep out of a paragraph
things not immediately relevant to what the topic sentence announces. If you
suddenly decide that there is an important point you must include in the
argument, make it in a separate paragraph.
One
way in which inexperienced writers commonly interrupt the unity of the
paragraph (and the argument) is suddenly to stray into large questions far
outside the scope of the focus you have defined. Once you start the argument,
you should stay specifically on that, without invoking huge generalizations
which lie outside the specific area you have defined. If you want to link the
argument to bigger questions, then do that in the conclusion.
For
example, if you are writing an argumentative essay about the significance of
Hamlet's abusive treatment of women in Hamlet, then stay on that
particular subject. Do not stray into generalizations about men and women or
about the history of Denmark
or gender-based violence or the treatment of the same theme in other plays. If
you find yourself writing about something in general, something not directly
pertinent to the specific details of the argument as you have defined it, then
you are almost certainly weakening the unity of the argument.
7.5 Paragraph Coherence
A
second important characteristic of argumentative paragraphs is that they must
be coherent, that is, the argument going on in them must flow logically from
sentence to sentence, so that the reader moves from the opening declaration of
the topic (in the topic sentence), through the evidence and interpretation, to
the conclusion of the paragraph in a clear linear fashion, with no erratic
jumps or confusing interruptions.
A Useful Blueprint for Achieving Paragraph Coherence
The
most logically coherent form for a paragraph presenting an inductive argument
is as follows:
1.
Topic sentence, an argumentative assertion announcing the main point the
paragraph is seeking to make, perhaps followed by one or two sentences
reinforcing and clarifying the argumentative stance in this paragraph;
2.
Evidence in the form of direct references to the text, quotations, statistics, summaries of relevant research data, and so on.
3.
Interpretation of the evidence, a section which discusses in detail how the
particular evidence you have introduced helps to back up the argumentative
point announced in the topic sentence;
4.
(Optional) Any qualifications you want to introduce to
limit the argument, and especially to clarify the reliability of the evidence
and thus the interpretations you have made of it (for examples, see below);
5.
Final summary point bringing the reader back to the point stressed in the topic
sentence.
This
is by no means the only possible coherent structure for an argumentative
paragraph, but, if you follow it closely, the resulting argument will be
coherent, since this follows the standard logic of an inductive argument: This
is what I am claiming; here is my evidence; this is what the evidence
indicates; here are any reservations I have about the evidence; and thus I have
established the claim I began with.
Notice
how this format works in the following paragraph, moving from topic sentence(s)
to evidence, to interpretation, to qualification, and finally to a restatement
of the original point. Here again, the references are imaginary, included
simply to show an example of the style.
It
is clear that our attempts to control the spread of illegal narcotics are not
producing the results we had hoped for, and it is thus high time we assessed
the value of our anti-drug measures. As we redouble our efforts and give the
police additional powers, the street price of illegal narcotics continues to
decline, a sure sign that the supply is becoming more plentiful (Jackson, 1997). A recent
study of the street trade in Vancouver
confirms our worst fears: addiction is increasing in the city, street prices
are falling, and the illegal infrastructure is growing in power (Callows, 1998). Other studies of the same city have shown
that there is an increasing supply reaching school children (Smart, 1995;
Stuart, 1997). This increase is naturally producing more young addicts (Thomas,
1997). What do these results indicate? It doesn't take much brain power to
figure out that the war on drugs, for which we are paying so much money, is not
having much success, if reducing or eliminating the supply is still a major
goal. It's true that we have to be careful with the results of some of these
studies, for their methods are not always as reliable as they might be, and
there are often political agendas at work in the studies of our narcotics
problem. Nevertheless, the recent literature, none of which offers any firm
evidence that our combat against narcotics is achieving anything positive
(other than enriching criminals and empowering police forces) must surely give
us reason to pause before we hurl millions more dollars into programmes which
are not working. For there is no evidence at all that such an expenditure will
achieve anything socially helpful. The money will, we
can be certain, largely go to waste. (292 words)
Transition Words as Logical Indicators
The
key to sustaining the coherence of a paragraph is often the appropriate use of
transition words. These are words or phrases, usually right at the start of a
sentence, which indicate the logical direction of the new sentence in relation
to what has just been said. They link what has just been written to what is now
being offered.
Here
are a few examples (the transition elements are in bold).
In addition to this point, there are many studies which establish a relationship between the
income of one's parents and success in school.
By contrast,
other passages of the poem suggest a totally different mood.
This
emphasis on pharmaceutical intervention, however, brings with it real
dangers. For example, the medication often brings immediately harmful
side effects. Moreover, it can also create long-term addiction. Beyond
that, there is the question of the expense. This being the case, one
wonders why we are so keen to continue with this medication.
Moreover,
rock 'n' roll music has exercised an important influence on civil rights in North America. In fact, in
popular music since the 1950's, more than in any other activity (with the
possible exception of professional sports), black people have won fame,
fortune, and lasting status among the white middle-class.For example,
thousands of eager white people all over North America have lined up to attend
concerts by Prince, Michael Jackson, Chubby Checker, Tina Turner, the Supremes,
Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and many, many other black performers. In
addition, black singing stars have ever since the late 1950's been in
demand with companies seeking high-profile figures to endorse products aimed at
the white middle classes. Indeed, it is now a common sight to see white
and black performers working together on prime-time television, without regard
to the colour of their skins. This phenomenon, we sometimes forget, is
very different from the situation before the 1950's. Then, in some
places no white group could appear on stage with a drummer (white or black),
because the drum was considered a black instrument. Moreover, there was
a rigidly enforced distinction between black music and white music. Radio
stations, for instance, played one type of music or the other, not both.
However, since the advent of rock 'n' roll all that has altered. To
be sure, many other factors were involved in this important and complex
social change. That cannot be denied. Still, we should not deny
our popular musicians the credit which is their due. For without their
pervasive influence and talent, often in difficult conditions, this
improvement in race relations would have come about much more slowly than it
did.
Look
carefully at these words in bold. Most of them could be removed from the
sentences, without damage to the sense. What would be lost, however, is the
constant presence of words and phrases linking elements in the argument and
providing the reader a sense of the logical relationship of the element coming
up to what has gone before.
An
intelligent use of transition words really helps to create and sustain the
coherence of a paragraph, enabling the reader easily to follow the logical
connections from one sentence to the next.
A Catalogue of Transition Words
The
list below indicates some of the common transition words indicating logical
connections between sentences and paragraphs. The words are grouped according
to the logical function they carry out (this list is not meant to be
comprehensive).
1.
Words indicating a continuity with what has gone before:
and, in addition, moreover, furthermore, also,
indeed, besides, secondly, next, similarly, again,
equally important, beyond that.
2.
Words indicating an example or illustration of a point introducing evidence: for
example, for instance, as an illustration.
3.
Words adding emphasis to a point which is reinforcing a previous point: in
fact, in other words, that is, indeed, as a matter
of fact.
4.
Words indicating a conclusion from or a result of what you have just been
discussing: thus, hence, therefore, consequently, as
a result.
5.
Words indicating a contrast with what has just been
said: but, however, nevertheless, by contrast, on
the other hand, conversely.
6.
Words indicating a qualification, doubt, or reservation about what you have
just been discussing: no doubt, of course, to be sure.
7.
Words indicating a summary statement is coming up: in
short, all in all, in brief, in conclusion, to
conclude, given all this.
8.
Pronoun and adjectival links to something which has gone before: this, that,
the above-mentioned, such.
9.
Words establishing time relationships (important in narrative paragraphs): after,
afterwards, then, later, before, while, at
the same time, immediately, thereupon, next, meanwhile,
subsequently, previously, simultaneously.
10.
Words indicating spatial relationships (important in physical descriptions): above,
beside, next to, on the other side, facing, parallel, across from, adjacent.
An Exercise in Transition Words
In
the spaces provided in the following paragraph, provide from the list above (or
from other similar phrases) transition words or phrases which will help the
logical coherence of the following paragraph. Read the paragraph once or twice
before starting to fill in the blank spaces. Then, when you have finished, read
the passage over again, making sure the words are helping to clarify the logic
of the sequence of sentences.
The
claim is often made that conducting conventional research and
publishing the results in academic journals is essential
to maintain a
high quality of instruction of undergraduates. _____________
this
claim is so common, that it is part of the official
policy of the
Canadian Association of University Teachers. _____________ it
is
not uncommon for evaluations of the quality of
teaching at a
post-secondary institution to factor in the research output
of the
faculty. ____________ is this claim true? __________
is it the case
that college teachers cannot do a good job unless
they maintain a
research output? Well, a number of studies suggest that
there is no
basis for this belief. _________________ a study by Johnston
(1991)
which explored the various studies of this question
concluded that
results consistently show no relationship between the
quality of
undergraduate instruction and research output. ______________
there is a great deal of anecdotal evidence which
claims the same
thing. _______________ there is no reliable evidence
that there is a
significant connection between the two activities,
something which
would support the common claim. _____________ the frequent
emphasis on the importance of research to maintain an
acceptable
level of undergraduate teaching would appear to be
unproven, a
cultural myth perhaps designed to perpetuate what
faculty want to do
rather than what the most urgent priorities of the
institution really are.
___________
this is a difficult question, because teaching quality
is
notoriously difficult to assess. ___________, given the
amount of
money spent to reduce the number of classes taught
in order to
promote research activity, one would think that some
evidence would
be required to justify the practice. ___________ this does not seem to
bother most institutions. __________ they cheerfully continue to
spend instructional money to support research. _________
the faculty
keep demanding more time away from class in order
to be better
teachers.
7.6 Concluding Paragraphs
An
argumentative essay should normally finish with a conclusion and sometimes,
depending on the subject, with conclusions and recommendations. The conclusions
and recommendations (if there are any) should be placed in the last
paragraph(s).
Good
conclusions are often difficult to write. It is best to leave them until you
have finished the first draft of the paper, so that you have a complete sense
of the argument as you have presented it. Now you are ready to leave the reader
with some final concluding thoughts.
In
thinking about how to write a conclusion, you might benefit from onsidering the following ideas:
1.
The conclusion should not continue the argument by introducing new material. It
is a place to sum up the argument which has come to an end in the final
paragraph of the main body of the argument. Hence, you should never introduce
new points in the conclusion.
2.
The main purpose of the conclusion is to sum up the argument, to re-emphasize
the thesis, and to leave the reader thinking about the importance of the
argument, perhaps in a wider context. In a sense, its purpose is the reverse of
the introduction: the conclusion moves the reader from the particular emphasis
of the argument and takes it out into a wider context (if this seems confusing,
check some of the examples below).
3.
There are a number of things a writer should be careful not to do in the
concluding paragraph. You should not, as mentioned, suddenly introduce a new
point, nor should you disqualify the argument you have just presented with a
comment like "But all this is just my opinion," or "But I really
don't know that much about the subject." Make sure the conclusion is a
confident reassertion of the main point of the argument.
4.
Here are some things you might do in a conclusion: you can sum up the argument
you have conducted and re-emphasize the thesis you set down at the beginning,
you can move back from the specific focus and place the argument in a larger
context (see example below), you can leave the reader with some specific
recommendations or questions to think about, or you can point to the future and
invite the reader to consider what you have said in that context.
Here
are some sample conclusions. Notice how the writer does not continue the
argument (which is over) but tends to draw back to place the issue in a wider
perspective and, at the same time, to reinforce for the reader the central
argument which the essay has been presenting.
Conclusion A (from
an essay arguing that Hamlet's character is not that of the ideal prince but is
badly flawed)
All
of the above points indicate quite clearly that, whatever the origin of the
evil in Elsinore,
the prince himself is one source of the sickness in the court. As we have seen,
again and again in the play Shakespeare brings out Hamlet's essential
immaturity, morbidity, aggressive hostility to women, and characteristic
duplicity. Of course, there is more to the man than just these elements and
more to the play than just the character of the prince. Moreover, Hamlet's
character, like the play, is very complicated and ambiguous. It will always
have elusive elements. However, as this essay has argued, the emphasis on the
unhealthy aspects of Hamlet's personality is so strong and frequent in the play
that, however we finally assess the hero, we must take into account his own
obvious inadequacies, all too clearly a source, if not the only source, for the
"something . . . rotten in the state of Denmark."
Conclusion B
(from an essay arguing that the failure of the Meech
Lake Accord was a direct result of the ineptitude of the federal government)
Well,
we no longer have a MeechLake
debate. And the federal government's next initiative on the troublesome
question of the Canadian constitution and the status of Quebec is anybody's guess. Given the
feelings generated by the almost interminable Mulroney-sponsored debate over
the accord and the many miscalculations of the national mood, factors which
scuttled government strategy, it seems unlikely that the federal Conservatives
will be eager to resurrect a national soul-searching on constitutional
questions. Besides, it appears as if Quebec
and the native people will be setting the agenda in the months ahead. But when
the time comes for another national effort on the constitution, we can only
hope that the federal government will be considerably more astute than the Mulroney
Tories, who turned a potential agreement into a nation-wide desire to separate.
Conclusion C
(from an essay arguing that the only rational solution to our narcotics problem
is to legalize all drugs)
Surely
it's time we recognized the facts of life: that our efforts to stamp out
illegal narcotics are only succeeding in enriching organized crime, providing
the police with dangerous new powers, filling our prisons with young people,
and encouraging many others to break the law. And, as I have mentioned, we need
to remember that the narcotics we are trying to stamp out are less dangerous
than many legal substances in widespread use. So instead of devising new
utopian and increasingly expensive and futile schemes to eliminate drugs, we
should move at once to change the law and to make cocaine, heroin, marijuana,
and their derivatives as legal as tobacco, alcohol, Valium,
and Ritalin.
Notice
carefully what each writer does in the above samples.
Conclusion
A (about Hamlet) opens by summarizing the main thrust of the argument
throughout the paper, reminding the reader one more time of what each paragraph
has been presenting. Then the writer moves back to consider the topic in the
context of the entire play, adding a qualification to indicate that she
realizes there is more to the topic than one short essay can deal with. Finally,
the concluding sentences answer the qualification by stressing the main point:
the unhealthy aspects of Hamlet's character are a significant part of the play.
This strategy of using the conclusion to place the specific issue of the essay
in the wider context of the entire work is often useful in conclusions to
essays on literary subjects.
Conclusion
B (about MeechLake), now that the
argument is over, speculates about the future. What is going to happen next? In
offering a couple of general answers to that question, the writer calls
attention to the main points in the essay, the incompetent handling of the
issue by the federal government. There is no call here for future action,
because the writer is not recommending anything. He is making a tentative
prediction (or mentioning a future hope). This enables him to reinforce the
main point of the essay. Such a conclusion is often helpful in an essay
discussing a modern political or historical issue.
Conclusion
C(about narcotics) opens with a quick but very specific summary (almost
in the form of a list) of the main points of the essay (each of which has been
discussed in detail during the main argument), and finishes with a specific
recommendation for future action. Such a structure is quite common in the
concluding paragraph of an essay exploring a modern social issue and demanding
action.
7.7 Recommendations
Sometimes
the argument you are conducting will require recommendations, in fact, your
thesis may well be in the form of one or more recommendations. Such a
requirement is quite common in arguments which are urging the need for
particular social or political responses to problems.
The
first thing to note is that a recommendation is not the same thing as a
conclusion. A conclusion arises, as we have seen, out of a deductive or
inductive argument. It is the logical result of a process of reasoning, and it
indicates the completion of a thought process. A recommendation is, as the name
suggests, a statement urging action. Alternatively put, a conclusion says, in
effect, "This is the case" or "This is very probably the
case"; a recommendation says "This is what we must (or should) do
about the case."
Logically
speaking, recommendations should normally follow conclusions. That is, the
thought process and argument which result in our understanding a problem better
should come before the proposals for how we should address the problem. This, I
take it, is generally obvious enough. We cannot review options and recommend a
course of action, until we have drawn conclusions about what the problem is.
None
of this is something you need worry about, unless the argument is leading up to
a series of recommendations, unless, that is, the major purpose of the argument
is to urge the readers to think about a series of practical measures which
should be implemented. Such a requirement is not uncommon in papers exploring
social problems or policy analysis, but it is rare in arguments about
literature or philosophy. If you are leading up to a series of recommendations
as a major purpose of the argument, then separate the conclusions from the
recommendations, present the conclusions first, and then in a separate
paragraph present the recommendations, usually in the form of a numbered list.
Notice
the following example of the end of an argument in which the conclusions
precede the recommendations and the latter are presented in the form of a list:
Sample Conclusion and Recommendation
Ending to a Paper
As
this argument has pointed out repeatedly, there is no reliable evidence that
the quality of teaching in universities and colleges is linked at all with
quantity or quality of conventional research and publishing activities. Simply
put, the frequent claim that conventional research is essential to good
teaching has no basis in fact. It may be true, of course, but there is as yet
no evidence to support the claim. Indeed the consistent result of studies into
this question, as we have shown, confirm the lack of a relationship. Given this
well known point, it is indeed curious that university and college faculty,
whose major task is educating undergraduates in correct reasoning, should
continue to insist upon such an unsubstantiated assertion in such an illogical
fashion, to the point where it has become an article of faith in faculty
culture, a myth. It is beyond the scope of this paper to explore why that might
be the case; suffice it to say that we should keep this conclusion in mind when
we evaluate how to spend the money we allocate for undergraduate instruction.
On
the basis of this well established conclusion, however, we should insist upon
some important reforms in undergraduate education, especially in the
university-colleges, which, unlike most large universities, have no mandate to
conduct research:
1.
The instructional budget should provide no release time for instructors to
conduct research (i.e., we should not cut classes and courses to fund independent
faculty research), unless there is some exceptional need for a particular
project to deal with a problem of immediate importance to the institution.
2.
Instructors should, under no circumstances, be ranked or evaluated according to
their research output.
3.
The processes of hiring new faculty should cease to consider research
qualifications and performance and concentrate exclusively upon the teaching
experience and qualifications of the candidates as the major criteria.
4.
The curriculum should be much more closely designed to meet the learning needs
of the students rather than the research interests of the faculty.
5.
If prevailing faculty culture insists that research time is essential to
maintain the quality of instruction, then we should inform them firmly and
repeatedly that, in the interests of reason, we will listen to any arguments
they wish to present, provided only there is some reliable evidence to support
their claim. Until such time, however, we are going to proceed with the reforms
listed above.
Notice how in this example, the conclusions
come first. They
sum up the argument which has already concluded. The final paragraph lists some
specific recommendations and finishes by urging that we implement these.
Such
a structure is, as mentioned, of particular importance only in those arguments
whose main purpose is to analyze a problem, reach some conclusions about the
source of the problem, and make recommendations about how we might deal with
it.