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Can the writer of the essay prove their arguement by coming to their own conclusion based upon how the author of the story makes you feel at the end?

2006-11-01 01:32:23 · 4 answers · asked by LG 4 in Education & Reference Homework Help

4 answers

The writer comes to a conclusion without using the first person. You should be trying to sway the reader to your belief on the topic. A well written paper will give information from both sides, but dispute the opposition with facts. You as the writer want the reader to come to his or her own conclusion at the end.

2006-11-01 01:38:04 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes. But be sure you use arguments that shine a light on all sides. Then you are 'free' to pick a side based on those arguments.

Be aware that most essay's are stronger when a reader is lead to a conclusion you do not specifically have written down.

2006-11-01 01:47:49 · answer #2 · answered by Puppy Zwolle 7 · 0 0

The writer doesn't prove anything at all by this.

His/her opinion is nothing but an "opinion" nothing more.

Proving anything is by giving statistics, graphs, names of other academics who agree or disagree with the author or some other actuality that substantially endorses or exposes the author to ridicule.

Sorry about that

2006-11-01 01:47:28 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

By all means express your opinion but it is probably worth briefly quoting the parts of the text that support your argument.

2006-11-01 01:40:28 · answer #4 · answered by andy c 7 · 0 0

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