Commentaries

Commentaries

Commentaries should begin with a basic introduction indicating which of the topics you intend

to address, be it the class discussions, a podcast or linked source, or some real-world issue

directly related to these.

COMMENTARY CRITERIA:

A. What the Commentaries

are:

1. Each of the commentary entries should be viewed as a careful and thoughtful response,

in

your own words

, to one of the class discussions, podcasts, or the like. The whole

purpose of the commentaries is for you to be able to do a bit of critical thinking and

reflection on your own, without the discussions of the class that may distract you. Some

of us do our best thinking without the noise of discussion (even if it’s online). Also,

sometimes we might have a conversation, and only later think of a great response. This is

your chance to give that response.

2. The commentaries need to be

focused and on topic

. Even though these are your

commentaries, it does need to be on point.

B. What the Commentaries

are not:

1. The commentaries are

not

a summary

or

recap

or

minutes

of the course, either from the

podcasts, or from the class discussions. I know what we have covered in the course, and so there

is no need to tell me, point by point, what I already know. Tell me what I don’t know, which is

what you think about the material covered in the podcasts, class discussions, etc. Reaction and

reflection are the key ideas here.

2. The commentaries are not an opportunity for you to allow others to think for you. These

are your commentaries, and I only want to hear from your mind. As such, outside sources are

highly discouraged, and of course, plagiarism of any sort will result in failure.

3. While the commentary is to be the work of your own mind, it is

not

just a free-form jazz

exploration about just any old thing in the world. In other words, don’t use the commentaries to

talk about general things not directly related to the text readings or class discussions (much less

philosophy in general), such as your complaints about a noisy neighbor, or your plans to watch

some television show with your friends, or the fact that you went shopping for a new gadget and

were happy because it was on sale, or unhappy because it wasn’t. (These are all examples of

[actual] bad commentaries I’ve gotten in the past. They didn’t end prettily . . .)

Posted: 6 Months AgoDue: 01/04/2019Budget: $15
Tags: ethics

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