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Analogy
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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.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
English School educational philosophy and international relations theory
¶ … English System: Order out of chaos through non-State connections
Paper Undergraduate
Socrates on Trial: Corruption, Teaching, and Democratic Ideals
What is Socrates' argument that he does not corrupt anyone? Is his argument a good one why or why not?
Paper Undergraduate
Water resource issues and management challenges
Fish were once a healthy and reliable source of protein for communities living by the sea. However, the increase in the overall population of the world combined with the popularity of certain species of fish for…
Paper Undergraduate
Buddhist Concept of Nirvana
Religious doctrine usually includes some form of salvation as a reward for good behavior and for keeping to the tenets of the religion. Each religion treats this general idea in its own way.
Paper Masters
Land Ethic and White Noise
Don DeLilo's novel White Noise examines the variety of anxieties affecting people in the late-Cold War and contemporary period, with certain portions focused especially on the role mass media plays in the construction…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Learning/Behavior Paul Chance\'s Book Learning
Paul Chance's book Learning and Behavior provides students and teachers with some intriguing and interesting ideas in learning about the psychology of learning. The theme running throughout the book is that "learning is…
Research Paper Doctorate
How individuals who hear voices relate with therapists about voice experiences
In an issue that aimed to reconsider the contributions that phenomenology offers to the practice of clinical psychology, Davidson outlined the ways in which transcendental psychology reconceptualized both research and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Philosophy of Mind
Since the beginning of his career in the early 1960's Jerry Fodor has been able to produce a number of discrete arguments regarding cognitive science and philosophy of the mind; and just as these two fields of thought…
Paper Masters
Henry James's The turn of the screw: analysis and themes
In speaking of ghost stories, one may say that while there's something rotten in the state of Denmark, there's something really rotten in the House of Bly. That is to say, The Turn of the Screw by Henry James is chock-full with moral depravity and psychological terror, so much so that it gives even the greatest ghost story of all time a run for its money. But what makes The Turn of the Screw such a tour de force is not the fact that like Shakespeare's rendering of Denmark in Hamlet, the House of Bly is "an unweeded garden" of "things rank and gross in nature," but that unlike Hamlet the source for that moral depravity and psychological terror is a complete mystery (Shakespeare). It is the purpose of this essay to examine who is to blame for all the misery and terror in The Turn of the Screw.
Paper Undergraduate
Movies and Communism the Red
The Red Menace on Film and the McCarthy Menace on Film: "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" and "Silver Lode"