Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 7¼ x 10¼
978-1-5381-0091-2 • Hardback • June 2017 • $89.00 • (£68.00)
978-1-5381-0092-9 • Paperback • June 2017 • $44.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-5381-0093-6 • eBook • June 2017 • $41.50 • (£35.00)
Anthony J. Graybosch is professor in the philosophy department at California State University Chico.
Gregory M. Scott is professor emeritus of political science at the University of Central Oklahoma.
Stephen M. Garrison is professor of English and creative writing, former chair of the Department of English, and director of the Creative Writing Program at the University of Central Oklahoma.
TO THE STUDENT Welcome to a Community of Skilled Thinkers
TO THE TEACHER: What’s New in the Fourth Edition?
PART 1Reading & Writing for Introductory Philosophy Courses
1Read & Write Philosophically: Get Started!
1.1Reading Analytically
Read & Write: Analyze The American Scholar
1.2Read News as Political Power
Read & Write: Compare the Slants of Front Pages
1.3Read News Like a Philosopher
Read & Write: Respond to an Editorial or Op-Ed Essay
1.4Define Your Personal Ethics
Read & Write: Write Your Own Statement of Ethics
1.5Clarify a Topic in the History of Philosophy
Read & Write: Start with TED
2Read & Write Effectively
2.1Get into the Flow of Writing
Read & Write: Narrowing Topics
2.2Think Creatively
Read & Write: Freewriting to Engage Your Creativity
2.3Organize Your Writing
Read & Write: Write an Outline for a Paper Inspired by a Published Article
2.4Draft, Revise, Edit, and Proofread
Read & Write: Discover Your Own Identity and Style
3Engage the Craft of Scholarship
3.1The Competent Writer
Read & Write: Rephrase to Eliminate a Sentence Fragment
3.2Avoid Errors in Grammar Punctuation
Read & Write: Proofread for the President
3.3Format Your Paper and its Contents Professionally
Read & Write: Explain the Data in this Table
3.4Cite Your Sources Properly
Read & Write: Create an Actually Usable Bibliography
3.5Avoid Plagiarism
Read & Write: Properly Summarize an Article from The Stone
4Practice the Craft of Argument
4.1Argue Effectively and Cogently
Read & Write: Write a Sound Argument
4.3Avoid Fallacies
Read & Write: Identify the Fallacies in the Following Arguments
5Arguments and Supporting Data Galore: Philosophy Information Sources
5.1Welcome to the APA and APS
Read & Write: Write an Email to an APA or APS Philosopher
5.2Mining Dissertations and Think Tanks
Read & Write: Collect Dissertations and Research Institute Studies
5.3Welcome to the National Archives
Read & Write: Collect Materials to Counter the “Benign Slavery” Argument
5.4Welcome to the Library of Congress (LOC)
Read & Write: Construct a Bibliography from the LOC Catalog
5.5Welcome to the Congressional Record
Read & Write: Refute a Recent Speech in Congress
6Read and Write Professionally and Critically
6.1How to Critique an Academic Article
Read & Write: Critique a Recent Article from a Philosophy Journal
6.2How to Write a Book Review
Read & Write: Review a New Philosophy Book
6.3How to Write a Literature Review
Read & Write: Write a Philosophy Literature Review
7Preliminary Scholarship: Research Effectively
7.1Institute an Effective Research Process
Read & Write: Write a Philosophical Research Proposal
7.2Find and Evaluate the Quality of Online and Printed Information
Read & Write: Locate a Dozen High Quality Sources
PART 2Practicing Philosophy with Advanced Writing Exercises
8Practice Varieties of Philosophy
8.1Practice Public Policy Analysis
Read & Write: Analyze a Local Government Policy
8.2Define and Apply Ethics
Read & Write: Compare Consequential and Deontological Arguments
8.3Apply Ethics to Public Policy
Read & Write: Construct an Ethics for the Singularity
8.4Practice the Philosophy of the Mind
Read & Write: Explore Problems and Potentials of Artificial Intelligence
8.5Practice the Philosophy of Religion
Read & Write: Encounter Minds and Gods
8.6Practice Political Philosophy
Read & Write: Behold the Panopticon
8.7Practice Legal Argumentation
Read & Write: Write an Abridged Amicus Brief for the U.S. Supreme Court
Appendices
AList of Philosophy Periodicals
BGlossary
CBibliography
INDEX
Twelve new chapter sections have been added to the 4th edition:
Reading Analytically
Read News as Political Power
Read News Like a Philosopher
Welcome to the APA and APS
Mining Dissertations and Think Tanks
Welcome to the National Archives
Welcome to the Library of Congress (LOC)
Welcome to the Congressional Record
Practice the Philosophy of the Mind
Practice the Philosophy of Religion
Practice Political Philosophy
Practice Legal Argumentation
Twenty-six new reading and writing assignments have been added to the Fourth Edition:
Read & Write: Analyze The American Scholar
Read & Write: Compare the Slants of Front Pages
Read & Write: Respond to an Editorial or Op-Ed Essay
Read & Write: Write Your Own Statement of Ethics
Read & Write: Write an Email to an APA or APS Philosopher
Read & Write: Start with TED
Read & Write: Narrowing Topics
Read & Write: Write an Outline for a Paper Inspired by a Published Article
Read & Write: Discover Your Own Identity and Style
Read & Write: Rephrase to Eliminate aSentence Fragment
Read & Write: Proofread for the President
Read & Write: Explain the Data in this Table
Read & Write: Create an Actually Usable Bibliography
Read & Write: Properly Summarize an Article from The Stone
Read & Write: Collect Dissertations and Research Institute Studies
Read & Write: Collect Materials to Counter the “Benign Slavery” Argument
Read & Write: Construct a Bibliography from the LOC Catalog
Read & Write: Refute a Recent Speech in Congress
Read & Write: Write a Philosophical Research Proposal
Read & Write: Locate a Dozen High Quality Sources
Read & Write: Compare Consequential and Deontological Arguments
Read & Write: Construct an Ethics for the Singularity
Read & Write: Explore Problems and Potentials of Artificial Intelligence
Read & Write: Encounter Minds and Gods
Read & Write: Behold the Panopticon
Read & Write: Write an Abridged Amicus Brief for the U.S. Supreme Court