Ethical Argument




Understanding the Ethical Writing Prompt

Defending an Argument through Ethics
During week 4, we will focus on how to properly defend ethical arguments as we work toward a completed Thesis/Outline for Essay 2.  

In an ethical argument, it is important to know that the focus is not only on an ethical issue.  The focus is HOW you defend the argument.  An ethical argument must be DEFENDED with ethical standards that people recognize. 

For example, if you said your ethics come from Christianity, then you would use Christian standards and principles of belief directly from the Bible to argue your point with an ethical defense. 

If you think, “No, I’m an American first, and my ethics come from American laws and beliefs,” then you would use American standards and principles of belief directly from American legal documents like the Constitution or the Bill of Rights.

In Module/Week 4 – the overall focus will be Locating and Evaluating Sources, Notetaking, and Ethical Argument. 
·         Have you learned how to evaluate a source? 
·         How well do you take notes about the sources you encounter? 
·         What exactly is an ethical argument?
·         How do you defend an ethical argument topic?

These concepts will be addressed in the classroom lecture handouts and the classroom readings so that you can use the most effective sources in your up-coming ethical argument and use them properly. Well, essay 1 is submitted, and you are ready for the next challenge…right?

Argument Writing
Earlier, you learned the characteristics of an argument writing.  The Writing Center at Chapel Hill clearly indicates the intent and focus of argument writing:
What is an argument? In academic writing, an argument is usually a main idea, often called a “claim” or “thesis statement,” backed up with evidence that supports the idea. In the majority of college papers, you will need to make some sort of claim and use evidence to support it, and your ability to do this well will separate your papers from those of students who see assignments as mere accumulations of fact and detail. In other words, gone are the happy days of being given a “topic” about which you can write anything. IT IS TIME TO STAKE OUT A POSITION AND PROVE WHY IT IS A GOOD POSITION FOR A THINKING PERSON TO HOLD. (“Argument”)

Proposal Argument Writing
In the first writing for our class, you were instructed to write a proposal argument.  The ISSUE was Opioid Deaths in America and how to Reduce Them.  The ARGUMENT was your viewpoint on how to reduce American deaths caused by opioids, and the STYLE/TYPE was a PROPOSAL.  This meant that you would have formed an arguable statement about how to alleviate opioid deaths in America and proposed changes to the current system or new ideas to fix the issue.

For the Proposal Argument, you considered 3 things:
·         The Issue (American deaths from opioid overdose),
·         The Argument (your viewpoint about how to fix this), and
·         The Proposed changes (specific steps) that would DEFEND your viewpoint on the issue.

Ethical Argument Writing
With this second argument writing, the focus must turn toward ethical argument writing. That means that you will be defending an argument based on a clear set of ETHICS.

Ethical Essay Prompt
Write an ethical argument in which you address the question: “How far should scientists go to modify humans through genetic engineering?”

We can go through the same stages (as before) to identify our assignment goal.  Your 2nd writing instructs you to write an ethical argument.  The ISSUE is How far scientists should go in modifying HUMANS through GENETIC ENGINEERING.  The ARGUMENT is your viewpoint on the issue, and the STYLE/TYPE is Ethics.  This means that you would form an arguable statement about how FAR scientists should be going in this area (or not) and indicate the ETHICS that would DEFEND your claim.

In an Ethical Argument, you must consider 3 things:
·         The Issue (How FAR scientists should go in genetically modifying HUMANS),
·         The Argument (your arguable viewpoint about the topic), and
·         The Ethical Standard (and principles) that will DEFEND your viewpoint on the issue.

Please be very careful in asserting the CLAIM and making sure that the DEFENSE for your claim comes from ETHICAL principles within an ethical standard.

KEY POINT 1
As you proceed, keep these concepts in mind:
1.        This is an ethical issue, and so it needs to be argued and proven using ethical standards.
2.        This is an argument paper, and so you must take a stand on how far scientists should go in human genetic modification.
3.        The source materials you will use will be predominantly from your chosen ethical standard:
a.       If you choose Christian ethics, the principles would be from the Bible;
b.       If you choose American ethics, the principles would be from the Constitution or the Bill of Rights;
c.       If you choose Medical ethics, the principles would be based on the Hippocratic Oath.
4.       You must focus the whole paper on arguing the ethical reasons why you believe scientists should do this or that in regard to genetic modification based on pre-set ethical principles.






End of Ethical Argument Overview



Works Cited
“Argument.” The Writing Center • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/argument/#:~:text=In academic writing, an
argument,evidence that supports the idea.&text=In other words, gone are,which you can write
anything.





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© J. Lynn H. Dick, 2019-2020
For Educational Purposes Only

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Essay 3 Cause/Effect Argument

Design and Development Handouts

· Know the Guidelines: Cause/Effect Argument Essay Writing—view the planning, outlining, and development handouts for the cause/effect essay.

· Sample thesis for a causal argument: this handout shows a sample cause/effect THESIS, the break-down of that THESIS, and how the essay would be structured to develop and argue the THESIS.

· Flow, Length, and Content of a Typical Body-paragraph: a specific break-down of what is expected in a well-developed body-paragraph of an argument paper.

· Need Ideas for Cause/Effect Essay??: this handout provides 'spring-board' articles and images to help you think through how you feel about the topic and possible cause/effect relationships. These are not scholarly sources. They are simply readings to help you understand different ideas surrounding the issue.