Essay Topic Hub

Analogy
Essays

721+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

721 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Analogy is a mode of reasoning and expression in which one thing is explained or evaluated by comparing it to something structurally similar, allowing writers to clarify complex ideas, build arguments, or reveal hidden relationships. It appears across disciplines including philosophy, ethics, rhetoric, and literary studies, making it a frequent subject in English and humanities courses. Students engage with analogy both as a tool they use in their own writing and as an object of critical analysis, examining how comparisons shape the way readers understand concepts related to life, death, the body, and individual rights.

The papers archived on this topic approach analogy from several distinct angles. Philosophical and ethical essays examine how analogical reasoning supports or weakens moral arguments, particularly in debates involving individuals, rights, and the body. Literary analysis papers, including work on texts such as the Letter from Birmingham Jail, explore how imagery and tone depend on analogical thinking to persuade audiences. Other essays take a more applied direction, using systems thinking or case-based reasoning to extend analogies into areas like technology and organ allocation, testing how far a comparison can stretch before it loses explanatory force.

A strong essay on analogy needs a focused thesis that identifies not just the comparison being made but the argumentative or interpretive work that comparison performs. Evidence drawn from close reading of specific language, or from tracing the logical structure of an argument, tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating an analogy as self-evidently valid rather than examining where the similarities end and the comparison begins to break down.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Rwanda and Nuremberg trials: comparative analysis
Nuremberg and Rwanda and the International Court
Paper Doctorate
Human Activities on Global Climate
¶ … human activities on global climate and how these activities result in the global climate change. The first portion of this paper basically concentrates on the debates that have risen with regards to the influence of…
Paper Undergraduate
Individual: Canter\'s Behavior Management Cycle:
Individual: Canter's Behavior Management Cycle: A Case Study
Paper Undergraduate
Real estate law principles and practice
Real Estate Law: Expanding the Notion of the Implied Warranty of Habitability
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership in Shia Islam, Orthodox
Some religions, such as certain sects of Protestantism, have a relatively unstructured leadership. However, three major religions, that of Orthodox Judaism, Roman Catholicism and Shiite Islam, have highly organized…
Paper Undergraduate
Inflation, Unemployment and Phillips Curve
Inflation, unemployment and their definitions
Research Paper Doctorate
Dysthymia: characteristics, diagnosis, and treatment approaches
Treatment of Women Diagnosed With Dysthymia
Research Paper Undergraduate
Science and religion: perspectives and interactions
Religion and Science are often placed in conflict because they seem to be at odds over certain key questions about the nature of the universe and the relationship of the human community to that universe.
Research Paper Doctorate
21st Century, the Term Marriage
¶ … 21st century, the term marriage and family therapy (MFT) seems as if it was long available as a principle means of treatment. In the timeline of psychotherapy, however, it is relatively young.
Paper Undergraduate
John Mill and De Beaviour
John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) and Simone De Beauvoir (1908-1986) both write meaningful treatise regarding the position of women in society. Both contend that women are subjected to men in legal and political functions,…