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Persuasive
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The definition of a persuasive essay is an essay that seeks to persuade the reader to adopt the writer’s perspective on a certain topic.  Persuasive essays may also be known as argumentative essays.  They differ from descriptive essays or even compare and contrast essays in that persuasive essays encourage the reader to adopt a position by the conclusion of the essay.

To write a persuasive essay, it is important for the writer to clearly take a position on the topic.  You want your reader not only to understand that you have taken a position, but to be convinced by your reasoning that your position is the correct one. 

To build a great persuasive essay, the writer needs to establish a clear-cut argument for his or her position.  Usually, the format to do this involves introducing the topic and the position, and then going into detail about the supporting arguments.  A good persuasive argument needs at least three supporting arguments to really explain why the writer’s position is the one the reader should choose. 

The tools necessary for a persuasive essay are logic, reasoning, and addressing the other side of the argument.  All of the supporting arguments need to contain internal logic, but they also need to logically support the writer’s thesis statement or opinion on the topic.  Sometimes, it might even be helpful to use a logic tree to ensure that your supporting arguments are well-reasoned and all support your thesis statement. 

The best way to learn how to write a great persuasive essay is to read persuasive essays on a variety of topics.  We have included some persuasive essay examples to help you familiarize yourself with the genre.  

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Paper Masters
Versus Persuasive Speaking Informative Speaking
Informative speaking is primarily factual and is designed to enrich or educate the listener; persuasive speaking is fundamentally designed to change the listener's mind or behaviors.
Paper Undergraduate
Regulating Internet Policy Regulating Internet
The focus of this paper is by providing the annotated bibliography of the three articles. The paper also discusses the opinions, reflections on experience, and feelings with regard to the ethical uses of the internet. The internet has become part of everyday life of individual and businesses. However, regulations to enhance ethical use of the internet is very critical to protect consumer privacy rights.
Paper Masters
Division of Labour Use Value and Aggregate Effective Demand
Division of labor is one of the most important concepts forwarded by Adam Smith. He believed it could improve the wealth of nations when each nation focused on production of only those things for which it had the…
Paper Doctorate
HR Planning, Turnover, and Staffing Strategies Explained
¶ … HR planning: defining the organization's strategic plan, conducting an external scan of the environment; conducting an internal assessment of the organization's labor resources; forecasting future workforce demand,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Artificial intelligence concepts and applications
Artificial Intelligence and the Human Brain
Paper Doctorate
Theoretical Analysis of Anoop Nayak\'s Boyz to Men
This paper analyzes Anoop Nayak's 2003 sociological study "Boyz to Men: masculinities, schooling and labour transitions in de- industrial times." Working class men in post-industrial England have a much higher unemployment rate than do women. Nayak theorized that the culture of masculinity created an environment which valorized increasingly scarce manual labor versus seeking higher education.
Research Paper Doctorate
Political Science Annotated Bibliography
In the view of Henry J. Abraham (Abraham 1998, 55), "theoretically," just about any qualified law school graduate with ambitions for an important judicial appointment would appear to have a fair chance at being…
Essay Doctorate
Kuhn's account of rationality in scientific revolutions
The paper will contend that scientific revolutions are irrational because science is irrational. As will be demonstrated by Kuhn and other authors, there is no specific logic as to why some theories and paradigms become popular and other do not. To paraphrase Kuhn, often whoever presented the better argument rather than whoever had the superior argument was the one that became popular and supported. In addition, Kuhn sums up the nature of scientific theories, popular or not, in that all scientific theories are empirically successful, but ultimately proven false. Thus, the nature of scientific theory is irrational and the rise of popular theories is irrational. How would scientific revolutions not be irrational also? The paper supports and proposes that Kuhn's views are that scientific revolutions are partially irrational in nature; they are necessary to scientific developments; and scientific revolutions like all revolutions, have political, economic, and cultural implications. Change and revolution are radical and often spring from emotional, psychological or ethical conflicts of interest; when it comes to human emotions, psychology, and ethics, rationality often takes a backseat to irrationality. The paper supplies Kuhn's reasons to think that shifts in scientific revolutions are not wholly rational and that Kuhn's reasoning effectively demonstrates that shifts in scientific thought violate codes of rationality.
Essay Doctorate
Yes: Carla T. Main Carla Main Believes
Should the current legal drinking age in the United States be lowered? This paper examines two opposing viewpoints on that issue, explaining each argument and analyzing each in terms of the quality of argument and the evidence used to support it. Each author is a respected professional who is qualified to write on this topic; their essays were excerpted in a volume of "Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Drugs and Society."
Essay Doctorate
De Bono Describes Four \"Processes\" That He
De Bono describes four "processes" that he says have the same basis. What does this basis seem to be? How do they differ from one another?