The general idea is that you compare and contrast two thinkers.Be sure your essa
The general idea is that you compare and contrast two thinkers.Be sure your essay is fully formed, i.e., introductory remarks, summaries, and analyses. When formulating your position, be sure to make your argument clear.Orient your essay around a single point you want to make, using your thinker(s) concepts and argument(s) as evidence.Be sure to present, describe, and explain significant concepts and their relations:Describe important concepts and lines of reasoning, e.g., ‘He says this, he argues that.’Explain important concepts and lines of reasoning, e.g., ‘This is what he means by this and that.’Connect important concepts and lines of reasoning to your thesis, e.g., ‘So, this is why…’Your completed essay should run between (no fewer than) 1000 and (approximately) 1200 words.Find and develop an epistemological point of contact between TWO (and only two!) of the following thinkers we′ve recently studied: Plato, Descartes, Hume, Appiah, and Toole.