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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 Masters
Figurative Language Versus Literal Language
This paper discusses different types of literary terminology. Terms such as hyperbole, euphemism, simile, and metaphor are described and their proper context explained. There are some tools which can be used, if used properly. However, there are also some literary devices which can make a piece of writing far worse. Authors must always be careful.
Research Paper Doctorate
Paley\'s Argument From Design
William Paley's version of the argument from design is that Nature has a discernible order to it; a design and therefore it can be inferred that there is a Creator behind it. Paley reached this conclusion through using…
Paper Undergraduate
Language acquisition: theories and processes
The acquisition of language is not a seamless process. All humans encounter errors as part of their linguistic development and practice. Humans around the world and across languages encounter similar behavior patterns as they grow into adults and gain linguistic fluency in their native languages. One such repeating phenomenon of note is the act of young children to misuse pronouns, using the word "me" when the correct word is "I." There are several ideas regarding how and why many children go through a stage in their linguistic development where they misuse pronouns. This paper will explore and critique the ideas of experts in several field including linguistics and language acquisition. The paper will propose and provide evidence for several factors that contribute to this speech phenomenon. The paper will prove that this particular speech act is a result of the interaction among several factors and that no a singular theory regarding this matter explains it completely.
Paper Doctorate
Origin of Species
Did the Enlightenment adequately prepare readers for the arrival of Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species? The paper argues that it did, by pursuing the analogy suggested in Darwin's own conclusion, comparing the theory of natural selection (and its attendant laws of nature) with Newton's theories of physics. It is concluded that what was most shocking about Darwin was not the threat he posed to biblical literalism or any form of creationism--since Darwin's conclusion makes reference to a creator--but the blow to human beings' pride as a species. By suggesting the Creator might operate by means of a process like natural selection, Darwin does not take God out of the picture, but he does make human beings seem a lot less significant (save for the fact that they are the only species that can think and argue about such issues).
Research Paper Doctorate
Dante\'s Divine Comedy, Canto 12
¶ … Inferno, Canto 12" by Alighieri Dante. Specifically, it will contain an analysis of the simile and meaning of Canto 12. This work will focus on his use of the epic simile, especially as it relates and illuminates…
Research Paper Doctorate
Canterbury Tales in English literature
Chaucer's "Retraction" and Its Meaning within the Context of the Canterbury Tales
Paper Masters
For-profit colleges: characteristics and impacts
This paper details the problems with for-profit institutions, including their high rates of defaults on student loans, low graduation rates, shaky accreditation standards, and high rates of debt incurred by graduates. It compares and contrasts these rates with nonprofit institutions, and concludes that on a cost-benefit analysis, students who attend for-profit schools are worse off economically than those who only have high school diplomas.
Paper Undergraduate
Analysing organizational structure and function
Patagonia has grown from a small back-yard boot-strapped operation to a multinational organization with far-reaching environmental influence. The culture of Patagonia has—as all organizational cultures do—evolved over the history of the organization. This analysis illustrates the efforts of the Patagonia to establish and maintain cultural congruence, and within the scope of this analysis, also highlights that an organization can exhibit many of the structural trappings of a corporation and still maintain the maverick attitude of a band of climbers and surfers. Collective action—collective corporate action—requires some constraining of individual behavior. The question to be answered in this analysis is whether behavior can be constrained for the good of the employees of an organization—and for the apparent good of the global environment—and not follow the corporate template of constraining behavior for the good of those in power. The artifacts, values and beliefs, and assumptions of Patagonia would imply that the answer to this question is a resounding affirmative—and that the critical consciousness of Choinard has carried and directed the organization on a path of cultural congruence.
Essay Doctorate
An argumentative response to chapter 3 of The Shallows by Nicholas Carr
This three page paper is about the third chapter in Nicholas Carr's 2011 book "The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains." The Chapter is entitled "Tools of the mind," and it places the Internet within the context of other "intellectual technologies." Carr focuses on maps and clocks as other intellectual technologies that changed the ways people think and live. The paper analyzes the chapter using outside sources.
Research Paper Doctorate
True Since We Were Children and We
¶ … true since we were children and we were told by adults that "words will never hurt us." A good many of us would most likely have preferred the sticks and stones because physical injuries often heal far more quickly…