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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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Paper Doctorate
Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams Humankind\'s Destiny
Humankind's destiny has always been driven by fate and circumstances and in dealing with these two, people have ways of changing the outcome while others simply accept what comes their way.
Paper Undergraduate
Plato's philosophy and influence on Western thought
Plato's cave allegory offers a rich analogy of the way human beings perceive and react to reality. The people living in the cave are described as being in shackles; they are self-made prisoners or prisoners of their own…
Paper Undergraduate
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social Organization. The Westminster Review. In Anthropological Theory: An Introductory Theory. Fourth Edition. R. McGee and Richard Warms. McGraw Hill.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Frog-Boiling Attack Studied and Carried
There are many available computer network systems in existence today, but they all have their flaws - including the ability to be hacked. Even those that say they have been protected from hacks can be shown to be easily broken-into in many cases. The paper addresses information on the frog-boiling attack and how it can get past any of the protection mechanisms that are currently used in order to protect computer networks.
Paper Undergraduate
Goldratt's Theory of Constraints: Overcoming Bottlenecks
Introduction to Goldratt's Theory of Constraints
Paper Doctorate
Film Theory Film and Reality
When photography appears in historical development, its indexicality adds the appeal of endurance through time to the impression of likeness in painted perspective. Crucially, ?likeness' is not given epistemological or cognitive value in itself, but rather is being invoked as a sup- port for fundamental needs of the subject vis-a-vis time. And cinema adds duration to the embalming of a single temporal instant in still photography. As Bazin puts it in ?The Myth of Total Cinema,? this makes cinema the realization of a perennial compulsion, a virtually ageless dream of perfect realism, which would have to include duration. But, as with any wish fulfillment, such preservation of the real object is protectively converted into the preservation of the subject. Always, for Bazin, cinema achieves its specificity through the relations of the subject.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Insurance Policies the Tragic Circumstances
The tragic circumstances surrounding the appearance of hurricane Katrina some two years ago highlighted a number of problems and issues facing not only the people of New Orleans and environs but all Americans.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Analogies between legislative and judicial processes
Legislative & Judicial Duties / Responsibilities
Research Paper Undergraduate
Georg Simmel it Can Be
It can be argued that in many ways Georg Simmel's work prefigures a more postmodern approach to the understanding of society and social action. More specifically, Simmel's work is founded in the analysis of the meaning…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Socrates the Philosophy of Socrates
It would not be an overstatement to say that the whole course of Western philosophy was influenced by the Greek philosopher known as Socrates. Although he did not leave any writings of his own or, at least, none of…