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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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Essay Doctorate
Analysis of chapters 4 and 5 from a psychology perspective
This is a five page paper. It is a five page paper that analyzes two chapters of a book. The book is by Jerome Bruner and is called Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. The chapters used for analysis are only chapters 4 (The Transactional Self) and Chapter 5 (about Vygotsky). The topic is psychology, but the book discusses consciousness from a philosophical and linguistic perspective too.
Paper High School
Speech Howard J. Brown Makes
Howard J. Brown makes an impressive presentation of his economic ideas in his speech "Economics and Ethics of Sustainable Design" (Brown, No date). He describes the current economic situation well and does a thorough…
Paper Undergraduate
IT Acquisition. Version 2.0 I Have Added
Business performance and IT acquistion issues are becoming more complex and standardized because of a variety of management tools. This assignemnt reviews how some IT methods are used and the care that companies may need to take as they grow into Cloud technologies.
Paper High School
What it Is to Be Human in Human Dignity
Fukuyama has called 'Factor X' the essential core of humanity: although there may be differences between persons in a society, there is a growing acknowledgement that we all possess a certain basic 'humanness' that elevates us above the animal kingdom. How logical is this concept, in light of what we have learned about humanity's location in the natural world and in relationship to the animal kingdom? This paper explores this question.
Paper Undergraduate
Logical fallacies and their applications in reasoning
¶ … speaker makes an appeal to emotion fallacy (because 'everyone' supports the idea, it must be right) while the second makes an irrelevant conclusion (caring about animals and homeless people are not mutually…
Research Paper Doctorate
Globalization of Agriculture, Food Production, and Resources
The Ideology and the Reality of Food Production and Agriculture
Research Paper Doctorate
James Dunn\'s Baptism in the Holy Spirit
James Dunn's book: The Baptism of the Holy Spirit is a traditional exegesis of the religious phenomenon which has been relegated in modern times to the Pentecostal Christian churches.
Paper Doctorate
I, Robot: themes and analysis
¶ … 1950, I, Robot is sometimes referred to as a novel, but it is a collection of short stories written over a ten-year period, all but one having appeared in Astounding magazine. There are several characters that do…
Research Paper Doctorate
Theology, religion, and Christian perspectives
Relativist said, 'The world does not exist, England does not exist, Oxford does not exist and I am confident that I do not Exist!' When Lewis was asked to reply, he stood up and said, 'How am I to talk to a man who's…
Research Paper Doctorate
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
¶ … Dying is a unique novel in that there is no discernable protagonist. In lieu of the protagonist is a corpse, Addie, who is dead for most of the book. The novel is written in the first person, from the perspective of…