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Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store
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Current Issues and Enduring Questions

A Guide to Critical Thinking and Argument, with ReadingsTwelfth Edition| ©2020New Edition Available Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

Current Issues and Enduring Questions is a text and reader that serves as an extensive resource for teaching argument, persuasive writing, critical thinking, and research. It includes readings on topics that matter to students, such as being seen as “the other” and student loan forgivene...

Current Issues and Enduring Questions is a text and reader that serves as an extensive resource for teaching argument, persuasive writing, critical thinking, and research. It includes readings on topics that matter to students, such as being seen as “the other” and student loan forgiveness, issues that students will want to engage with and debate.  Comprehensive coverage of classic and contemporary approaches to argument includes Aristotelian, Toulmin, Rogerian, and a range of alternative views, such as analyzing and writing about visual arguments.

This new edition does more than ever to make argument concepts clear, and to give students strategies for crafting effective arguments.  For today’s ever-increasingly visual learners who are challenged to separate what’s real from what’s not, new activities and visual flowcharts support information literacy. Newly annotated readings highlight important rhetorical moves. And new readings explore controversial issues such as mass incarceration, cultural appropriation, and the way computer algorithms make biased decisions.

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Home Features New to This Edition Reviews
Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

A comprehensive and versatile argument text, with a sharp focus on critical thinking.

Current Issues and Enduring Questions is a text and reader that serves as an extensive resource for teaching argument, persuasive writing, critical thinking, and research. It includes readings on topics that matter to students, such as being seen as “the other” and student loan forgiveness, issues that students will want to engage with and debate.  Comprehensive coverage of classic and contemporary approaches to argument includes Aristotelian, Toulmin, Rogerian, and a range of alternative views, such as analyzing and writing about visual arguments.

This new edition does more than ever to make argument concepts clear, and to give students strategies for crafting effective arguments.  For today’s ever-increasingly visual learners who are challenged to separate what’s real from what’s not, new activities and visual flowcharts support information literacy. Newly annotated readings highlight important rhetorical moves. And new readings explore controversial issues such as mass incarceration, cultural appropriation, and the way computer algorithms make biased decisions.

Features

The most comprehensive, balanced, and flexible resource for teaching critical thinking and argument. Current Issues and Enduring Questions includes thorough instruction on critical thinking, reading, writing, and argument and a wide-ranging anthology of arguments for analysis. The text shows students how to recognize and evaluate assumptions and apply critical thinking and reading skills to writing argumentative essays.

An extensive range of argument strategies. Early chapters give students a vocabulary for argument — thesis, claim, assumption, appeal, evidence, and more — in both text and visual genres. A unique section introduces students to the following approaches to argument: philosophical (the Toulmin model); logical (deduction, induction, fallacies); psychological (Rogerian); literary; and oral argument and debate.

A rich variety of perspectives and claims about issues in the news. 119 readings throughout the book (including ten student essays) showcase argument and inspire student response and analysis on topics such as the value of a college education, student loans, immigration, social media and relationships, the ideal society, and happiness. The anthology of readings includes debates and casebooks on current issues, as well as chapters on enduring philosophical questions.

Activities that engage critical thinking and allow students to experiment with argument techniques. "Thinking Critically" activities throughout the text give students practice in analyzing and constructing arguments, focusing on skills such as generating topics, defining terms and concepts, narrowing a thesis, and using transitions in argument.

Visual, student-friendly design. Colorful features make the book visually appealing and easy to navigate. Over eighty visuals such as ads, cartoons, photographs, and Web pages create opportunities for critical inquiry as well as a lively, up-to-date look.

Briefer versions that allow for even more flexibility and choice. If a smaller, lower-priced text is more appropriate, the same thorough coverage is available with fewer readings:

  • Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing, Tenth Edition, has 50 readings, about a third of the amount in the larger book.
  • From Critical Thinking to Argument: A Portable Guide, Sixth Edition, includes 17 readings.

New to This Edition

Two new debates, three new casebooks, and one new enduring questions chapter foreground issues that matter to students and make for an engaging classroom.  Feedback from instructors teaching argument inspired new readings chapters that take on some of today’s most controversial issues, including the effects of the #MeToo movement (in a chapter featuring all women writers), tolerance and free speech on campus, algorithm bias, the ethics of cultural appropriation, whether democracy is in danger, and how we construct and treat the “Other.”

Fresh and timely new readings. More than a third of the featured arguments are new, covering dozens of high-interest topics. Notable additions include these:

  • Suzanne Nossel argues in “The Pro-Free Speech Way to Fight Fake News” that the best way to counter exceedingly partisan media and fraudulent stories is to give consumers the tools to think critically.
  • Ashwini Tambe highlights the groups of women marginalized by marches and protests in “Reckoning with the Silences of #MeToo.”
  • Kwame Anthony Appiah cautions against granting too much authority to collective identities in “Go Ahead, Speak for Yourself.”

More help with fostering information literacy. Early chapters on critical reading and writing are updated to include topics such as confirmation bias, and Chapter 7, “Using Sources,” is modernized to help students interrogate their sources for reliability, relevance, and accuracy. New sections such as “Why Finding Reliable Internet Sources Is So Challenging” understand that digital natives seek and find information online and provides instruction and visual examples of sponsored content, fake news sites, and scholarly databases so that students can evaluate and use research effectively.

New Visual Guides that support critical thinking.  Graphics and flow charts now aid students in designing their own paths through common argument tasks such as writing a critical summary and organizing an analysis.

Annotated essays that make argument moves visible. In addition to the student essays that are marked to show writers’ strategies, this edition features several selections by professional writers that provide support for understanding argument during the reading process and highlight writers’ rhetorical moves and persuasive strategies.

Even more topics on critical thinking and reading. New sections include a “Survey, Analyze, and Evaluate” process for working through an issue, an understanding of “Obstacles to Critical Thinking,” and strategies for “Approaching an Issue (or an Assignment).”

Writing prompts that support major course assignments. Each chapter on critical thinking, reading, and writing now features  a capstone writing prompt that allows students to practice argument in common assignment genres.

"Current Issues and Enduring Questions will provide the core for almost any approach to teaching argumentation. It is readable without being condescending, practical without being formulaic, and flexible without being devoid of an overarching view of writing, reading, and thinking."
— Larry Beason, University of South Alabama

"Current Issues and Enduring Questions is unique and special in that it treats critical thinking, reading, and writing in equal standing."
— Reid T. Sagara, College of the Desert

"This is a "complete" text! It contains all the resources an instructor might need: the essential aspects of an introduction to critical thinking and argument, the research paper, analyzing visual arguments, and a great selection of readings on popular topics. There is something for everyone in Current Issues and Enduring Questions."
— John McKinnis, SUNY Buffalo State

"Current Issues is a book that challenges students, but does so in a way that encourages and enables them to meet those challenges. I know of no other textbook that does this so effectively."
— Ted Brown, Murray State University

"With its tight focus on argument and solid blend of classic and contemporary essays, Current Issues and Enduring Questions supports students and provides them with the resources they need."
— Jayanti Tamm, Ocean County College

Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions

Twelfth Edition| ©2020

Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

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Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions

Twelfth Edition| 2020

Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

Table of Contents

 

Preface
 
PART ONE: CRITICAL THINKING AND READING 
 
1           Critical Thinking 
Thinking through an Issue 
Analyzing and Evaluating from Multiple Perspectives 
             Survey, Analyze, and Evaluate the Issue 
Visual Guide: Evaluating a Proposal 
             Obstacles to Critical Thinking 
             Anticipating Counterarguments 
Critical Thinking at Work: From a Cluster to a Short Essay 
ALEXA CABRERA, Stirred and Strained: Pastafarians Should Be Allowed to Practice in Prison (annotated student essay) 
Generating Ideas: Writing as a Way of Thinking 
             Confronting Unfamiliar Issues 
             Using Clustering to Discover Ideas 
             Approaching an Issue (or an Assignment) 
             Prompting Yourself: Classical Topics and Invention 
An Essay for Generating Ideas
NINA FEDOROFF, The Genetically Engineered Salmon Is a Boon for Consumers and Sustainability 
Thinking Critically: Generating Ideas with Topics 
             Thinking Critically about the Issue 
A Checklist for Critical Thinking 
A Short Essay Calling for Critical Thinking 
LYNN STUART PARRAMORE, Fitbits for Bosses (annotated)
Examining Assumptions 
A Checklist for Examining Assumptions 
*HELEN BENEDICT, The Military Has a Man Problem
Assignments for Critical Thinking 
 
2           Critical Reading: Getting Started 
Active Reading 
             Previewing 
             A Short Essay for Previewing Practice 
Thinking Critically: Previewing
SANJAY GUPTA, Why I Changed My Mind on Weed 
             Reading with a Careful Eye: Underlining, Highlighting, Annotating 
             Reading: Fast and Slow 
             Defining Terms and Concepts 
Summarizing and Paraphrasing 
A Checklist for a Paraphrase
Patchwriting and Plagiarism 
Strategies for Summarizing 
             Critical Summary 
Visual Guide: Writing a Critical Summary 
             A Short Essay for Summarizing Practice 
SUSAN JACOBY, A First Amendment Junkie (annotated)
A Checklist for a Summary
Essays for Analysis
GWEN WILDE, Why the Pledge of Allegiance Should Be Revised (annotated student essay)
ZACHARY SHEMTOB and DAVID LAT, Executions Should Be Televised
A Casebook for Critical Reading: Should Some Kinds of Speech Be Censored? 
*SUZANNE NOSSEL, The Pro-Free Speech Way to Fight Fake News  
CHARLES R. LAWRENCE III, On Racist Speech 
Assignments for Critical Reading 
 
3           Critical Reading: Getting Deeper into Arguments 
Persuasion, Argument, and Rhetorical Appeals 
Visual Guide: Evaluating Persuasive Appeals 
Thinking Critically: Identifying Ethos 
Reason, Rationalization, and Confirmation Bias 
Types of Reasoning  
             Induction 
             Deduction 
             Premises and Syllogisms 
Some Procedures in Argument 
             Definitions 
             Assumptions 
             Evidence: Experimentation, Examples, Authoritative Testimony, and Numerical Data 
Thinking Critically: Authoritative Testimony 
A Checklist for Evaluating Statistical Evidence 
Nonrational Appeals 
             Satire, Irony, Sarcasm 
             Emotional Appeals 
Thinking Critically: Nonrational Appeals 
Does All Writing Contain Arguments? 
A Checklist for Analyzing an Argument 
An Example: An Argument and a Look at the Writer’s Strategies 
*JOHN TIERNEY, The Reign of Recycling (annotated) 
Arguments for Analysis 
*KWAME ANTHONY APPIAH, Go Ahead, Speak for Yourself 
*NAUSICAA RENNER, How Do You Explain The “Obvious?” 
ANNA LISA RAYA, It’s Hard Enough Being Me (student essay) 
RONALD TAKAKI, The Harmful Myth of Asian Superiority  
JAMES Q. WILSON, Just Take Away Their Guns 
*BERNIE SANDERS, We Must Make Public Colleges and Universities Tuition Free  
Assignments for Critical Reading 
 
4           Visual Rhetoric: Thinking about Images as Arguments 
Uses of Visual Images 
             Types of Emotional Appeals 
Seeing versus Looking: Reading Advertisements 
A Checklist for Analyzing Images
Levels of Images 
Visual Guide: Analyzing Images  
Documenting Reality: Reading Photographs 
             A Word on “Alternative Facts” 
Accommodating, Resisting, and Negotiating the Meaning of Images 
Are Some Images Not Fit to Be Shown?: Politics and Pictures  
An Argument on Publishing Images 
Writing about Political Cartoons  
Thinking Critically: Analysis of a Political Cartoon 
A Checklist for Analyzing Political Cartoons 
An Example: A Student’s Essay Analyzing Images 
*RYAN KWON, The American Pipe Dream? (annotated student essay) 
Visuals as Aids to Clarity: Maps, Graphs, and Pie Charts 
             A Word on Misleading or Manipulative Visual Data 
A Checklist for Charts and Graphs 
Using Visuals in Your Own Paper
Additional Images for Analysis 
DOROTHEA LANGE, Migrant Mother 
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT, World War II Recruitment Poster 
NORA EPHRON, The Boston Photographs 
Assignments in Visual Rhetoric 
 
Part Two CRITICAL WRITING
 
5           Writing an Analysis of an Argument  
Analyzing an Argument       
Examining The Author’s Thesis     
Examining The Author’s Purpose            
Examining The Author’s Methods              
Examining The Author’s Persona               
Examining The Author’s Audience          
A Checklist for Analyzing an Author’s Intended Audience             
             Organizing Your Analysis                 
Visual Guide: Organizing Your Analysis    
             Summary versus Analysis           
A Checklist for Analyzing a Text         
An Argument, Its Elements, and a Student’s Analysis of the Argument    
NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, For Environmental Balance, Pick Up a Rifle  
Thinking Critically: Examining Language to Analyze an Author’s Argument     
             The Essay Analyzed              
*THERESA CARCALDI, For Sound Argument, Drop The Jokes: How Kristof Falls Short in Convincing His Audience (annotated student essay)          
An Analysis of the Student’s Analysis        
A Checklist for Writing an Analysis of an Argument                 
Arguments for Analysis  
JEFF JACOBY, Bring Back Flogging  
*MATTHEW WALTHER, Sorry, Nerds: Video Games Are Not a Sport  
JUSTIN CRONIN, Confessions of a Liberal Gun Owner  
*CARL SAFINA, Never Mind Theory  
Assignment for Writing an Analysis of an Argument  
 
6 Developing an Argument of Your Own  
Planning an Argument      
             Getting Ideas: Argument as an Instrument of Inquiry                
             Three Brainstorming Strategies: Freewriting, Listing, and Diagramming 
             Revision as Invention 
             Asking Questions with Stasis Theory             
             Considering Evidence       
             The Thesis or Main Point                 
A Checklist for a Thesis Statement  
Thinking Critically: Walking the Tightrope    
             Imagining an Audience     
             The Audience as Collaborator 
             Addressing Opposition and Establishing Common Ground 
A Checklist for Imagining an Audience          
Drafting and Revising Argument    
             The Title              
             The Opening Paragraphs                 
             Organizing the Body of the Essay   
Visual Guide: Organizing Your Argument  
             The Ending         
Thinking Critically: Using Transitions in Argument  
             Uses of an Outline            
A Checklist for Organizing an Argument       
             Tone and the Writer’s Persona       
             We, One, or I?                    
Thinking Critically: Eliminating We, One, and I           
A Checklist for Establishing Tone and Persona             
             Avoiding Sexist Language   
Peer Review                   
A Checklist for Peer Review
A Student’s Essay, from Rough Notes to Final Version               
EMILY ANDREWS, Why I Don’t Spare Change (annotated student essay)
Assignment for an Argument of Your Own  
 
7           Using Sources  
Why Use Sources?  
             Entering a Discourse        
             Understanding Information Literacy             
Choosing a Topic  
Finding Sources  
Visual Guide: Finding Discourse on Your Topic       
             Finding Quality Information Online  
             Finding Articles Using Library Databases  
Thinking Critically: Using Search Terms         
             Locating Books  
Evaluating Sources  
             Scholarly, Popular, and Trade Sources         
             Evaluating Online Sources 
             Why Finding Reliable Internet Sources Is So Challenging          
             A Word on “Fake News” 
A Checklist for Identifying Fake News
             Native Advertising and Branded Content                     
             Considering How Current Sources Are         
A Checklist for Evaluating Sources     
Performing Your Own Primary Research     
             Interviewing Peers and Local Authorities
Visual Guide: Conducting Interviews          
             Conducting Observations 
             Conducting Surveys          
             Research in Archives and Special Collections             
Synthesizing Sources
Taking Notes  
             A Note on Plagiarizing      
A Checklist for Avoiding Plagiarism  
Compiling an Annotated Bibliography  
Quoting from Sources  
Visual Guide: Integrating Quotations
Thinking Critically: Using Signal Phrases       
Documentation  
             A Note on Footnotes (and Endnotes)  
MLA Format: Citations within the Text  
MLA Format: The List of Works Cited  
APA Format: Citations within the Text  
APA Format: The List of References  
A Checklist for Critical Papers Using Sources                 
An Annotated Student Research Paper in MLA Format  
LESLEY TIMMERMAN, An Argument for Corporate Responsibility (annotated student essay)  
An Annotated Student Research Paper in APA Format  
*HANNAH SMITH BROOKS, Does Ability Determine Expertise? (annotated student essay)   
 
Part Three FURTHER VIEWS ON ARGUMENT
 
8 A Philosopher’s View: The Toulmin Model              
Visual Guide: The Toulmin Method 
Components of the Toulmin Model
The Claim  
Grounds  
Warrants  
Backing  
Modal Qualifiers  
Rebuttals  
Thinking Critically: Constructing a Toulmin Argument                
Putting the Toulmin Method to Work: Responding to an Argument  
JAMES E. McWILLIAMS, The Locavore Myth: Why Buying from Nearby Farmers Won’t Save the Planet   
Thinking with Toulmin’s Method  
 A Checklist Using the Toulmin Method    
 
9 A Logician’s View: Deduction, Induction, and Fallacies  
Using Formal Logic for Critical Thinking        
Visual Guide: Deduction and Induction         
Deduction
Examples of Deduction  
Induction  
             Observation and Inference  
             Probability  
             Mill’s Methods  
Fallacies  
             Fallacies of Ambiguity  
             Fallacies of Presumption  
             Fallacies of Irrelevance  
             Additional Fallacies           
A Checklist for Evaluating an Argument from a Logical Point of View
Thinking Critically: Identifying Fallacies 
MAX SHULMAN, Love Is a Fallacy   
 
10 A Psychologist’s View: Rogerian Argument           
Rogerian Argument: An Introduction  
Visual Guide: Rogerian Argument  
A Checklist for Analyzing Rogerian Argument              
CARL R. ROGERS, Communication: Its Blocking and Its Facilitation  
EDWARD O. WILSON, Letter to a Southern Baptist Minister 
 
11 A Literary Critic’s View: Arguing about Literature
Interpreting  
Judging (or Evaluating)   
Theorizing  
A Checklist for Arguing about Literature       
Examples: Two Students Interpret Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall”   
ROBERT FROST, Mending Wall  
JONATHAN DEUTSCH, The Deluded Speaker in Frost’s “Mending Wall” (student essay)   
FELICIA ALONSO, The Debate in Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall” (student essay)  
Reading a Poem and a Story  
*RICHARD BLANCO, One Today  
KATE CHOPIN, The Story of an Hour
Thinking about the Effects of Literature  
PLATO, “The Greater Part of the Stories Current Today We Shall Have to Reject”   
 
12 A Debater’s View: Individual Oral Presentations and Debate           
Oral Presentations  
             Methods of Delivery  
             Audience 
A Checklist for an Oral Presentation  
             Delivery  
             Content  
Formal Debates  
             Standard Debate Format  
A Checklist for Preparing for a Debate            
 
Part Four  CURRENT ISSUES: OCCASIONS FOR DEBATE  
Debates as an Aid to Thinking  
A Checklist for Analyzing a Debate  
 
13        Student Loans: Should Some Indebtedness Be Forgiven?  
ROBERT APPLEBAUM, Debate on Student Loan Debt Doesn’t Go Far Enough  
Analyzing a Visual: Student Loan Debt  
JUSTIN WOLFERS, Forgive Student Loans? Worst Idea Ever  
 
*14      Are Algorithms Biased (Or Are We)?           
*SUFIYA UMOJA NOBLE, Missed Connections: What Search Engines Say about Women    
Analyzing a Visual: Predictive Search
*ALEX P. MILLER, Why Do We Care So Much about Explainable Algorithms?: In Defense of the Black Box 
 
*15 (Un)safe Spaces: Can We Tolerate Intolerant Speech on Campus? 
*JULIA SERANO, Free Speech and the Paradox of Tolerance
Analyzing a Visual: Student Views on Speech              
DEREK BOK, Protecting Freedom of Expression on the Campus              
 
16        The Current State of Childhood: Is “Helicopter Parenting” the “Problem” with Millennials?  
NICK GILLESPIE, Millennials Are Selfish and Entitled, and Helicopter Parents Are to Blame  
Analyzing a Visual: Overparenting  
ALFIE KOHN, The One-Sided Culture War against Children  
 
17        Genetic Modification of Human Beings: Is It Acceptable?  
RONALD M. GREEN, Building Baby from the Genes Up  
Analyzing a Visual: Genetic Modification of Human Beings  
RICHARD HAYES, Genetically Modified Humans? No Thanks  
 
18        Military Service: Should It Be Required?  
CHARLES RANGEL, The Draft Would Compel Us to Share the Sacrifice  
Analyzing a Visual: Military Recruiting  
JAMES LACEY, We Need Trained Soldiers, Not a Horde of Draftees  
 
Part Four  CURRENT ISSUES: CASEBOOKS

19        A College Education: What Is Its Purpose?
ANDREW DELBANCO, 3 Reasons College Still Matters  
CARLO ROTELLA, No, It Doesn’t Matter What You Majored In  
EDWARD CONARD, We Don’t Need More Humanities Majors  
CHRISTIAN MADSBJERG AND MIKKEL B. RASMUSSEN, We Need More Humanities Majors  
*CAROLINE HARPER, HBCUs, Black Women, and STEM Success   
 
*20 Race and Criminal Justice: Is the System Broken?                    
ADAM GOPNIK, The Caging of America                        
MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN, The Cradle to Prison Pipeline      
PRISON POLICY INITIATIVE, Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie  (infographic)
*HEATHER MAC DONALD, The Myth of Criminal-Justice Racism 
STEVE CHAPMAN, Are Blacks to Blame for Cops’ Actions?  
*PAUL BUTLER, The Chokehold 
 
*21 The Ethics of Appropriation: Is It OK to Copy?   
*KENAN MALIK, The Bane of Cultural Appropriation  
*YO ZUSHI, What’s Mine Is Yours                   
*K. TEMPEST BRADFORD, Cultural Appropriation Is, In Fact, Indefensible 
*CONOR FRIEDERSDORF, A Food Fight at Oberlin College                        
*ANDREA PITZER, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan  
*KENNETH GOLDSMITH, Uncreative Writing        
 
22 Online Versus IRL: How Has Social Networking Changed How We Relate to One Another? 
JULES EVANS, Are We Slaves to Our Online Selves?  
NAVNEET ALANG, Eat, Pray, Post    
*HOSSEIN DERAKSHAN, How Social Media Endangers Knowledge  
STEPHEN MARCHE, Is Facebook Making Us Lonely? 
JOSH ROSE, How Social Media Is Having a Positive Impact on Our Culture 
*JARON LANIER, Social Media Is Making You into an Asshole                   
*TOURIA BENLAFQIH, Has Social Media Made Young People Better Citizens?    
 
23 Immigration: What Is to Be Done? 
*AVIVA CHOMSKY, Talking Sense about Immigration  
*JOSEPH CARENS, The Case for Open Borders 
*REIHAN SALAM, Beyond the Wall   
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON, Our Brave New World of Immigration 
Analyzing Visuals: Immigration Then and Now  
 
*24 #MeToo: (How) Has Society Changed for Women?  
*SARAH JAFFE, The Collective Power of #MeToo  
*ASHWINI TAMBE, Reckoning with the Silences of #MeToo
*V.L. SEEK, Utmost Resistance
*ROBIN WEST, Manufacturing Consent  
*BECKY HAYES, The Critics of #MeToo and the Due Process Fallacy 
*BARI WEISS, The Limits of “Believe All Women”          
 
*25 American Democracy: Is Our Nation in Danger?               
*IAN BREMMER, Us vs. Them: The Failure of Globalism  
*DAVID RUNCIMAN, How Democracy Ends  
*SEBASTIEN THIBAULT, America’s Collapse (Illustration)             
*RUSSELL MUIRHEAD AND NANCY ROSENBLUM, The New Conspiracists            
*GANESH SITARAMAN, Divided We Fall       
*MEGAN McARDLE, The New Nationalism America Needs Right Now    
 
Part Six ENDURING QUESTIONS: ESSAYS, POEMS, AND STORIES
 
26 What Is the Ideal Society?        
THOMAS MORE, From Utopia  
NICCOLÒ MACHIAVELLI, From The Prince  
THOMAS JEFFERSON, The Declaration of Independence  
ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions  
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR., I Have a Dream  
W. H. AUDEN, The Unknown Citizen  
EMMA LAZARUS, The New Colossus  
WALT WHITMAN, One Song, America, Before I Go  
URSULA K. LE GUIN, The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas  
 
*27      How and Why Do We Construct the “Other”?          
*JEAN-PAUL SARTRE, Anti-Semite and Jew  
*HANS MASSAQUOI, Destined to Witness 
*W.E.B. DUBOIS, Of Our Spiritual Strivings   
*BRIDGET ANDERSON, The Politics of Pests: Immigration and the Invasive Other 
*JOHN BARTH, Us/Them
*JACOB RIIS, How the Other Half Lives  
*SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR, The Woman as Other           
*RUDYARD KIPLING, We and They  
*EMARI DIGIORGIO, When You Are the Brownest White Girl   
 
28 What Is Happiness? 
Thoughts about Happiness, Ancient and Modern                  
DANIEL GILBERT, Does Fatherhood Make You Happy?   
HENRY DAVID THOREAU, Selections from Walden  
DARRIN M. McMAHON, In Pursuit of Unhappiness  
EPICTETUS, From The Handbook  
BERTRAND RUSSELL, The Happy Life  
THE DALAI LAMA AND HOWARD C. CUTLER, Inner Contentment  
C. S. LEWIS, We Have No “Right to Happiness”   
DANIELLE CRITTENDEN, About Love               
JUDY BRADY, I Want a Wife

Index of Authors, Titles, and Terms

Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions

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Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

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Sylvan Barnet

Sylvan Barnet was a professor of English and former director of writing at Tufts University. His several texts on writing and his numerous anthologies for introductory composition and literature courses have remained leaders in their field through many editions. His titles, with Hugo Bedau, include Current Issues and Enduring Questions; Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing; and From Critical Thinking to Argument.


Hugo Bedau

Hugo Bedau was a professor of philosophy at Tufts University and served as chair of the philosophy department and chair of the university’s committee on College Writing. An internationally respected expert on the death penalty, and on moral, legal, and political philosophy, he wrote or edited a number of books on these topics. He co-authored, with Sylvan Barnet, of Current Issues and Enduring Questions; Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing; and From Critical Thinking to Argument.


John O'Hara

John Fitzgerald O’Hara is an associate professor of Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing at Stockton University, where he is the coordinator of the first-year critical thinking program, and former Director of the Master of Arts in American Studies Program. He regularly teaches writing, critical thinking, and courses in American literature and history and is a nationally-recognized expert on the 1960s. He is the co-author of Current Issues and Enduring Questions; Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing; and From Critical Thinking to Argument.

Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

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Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions

Twelfth Edition| 2020

Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

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Current Issues and Enduring Questions with 2020 APA and 2021 MLA Updates by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2021 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions with 2020 APA and 2021 MLA Updates

Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara | Twelfth Edition | 2021 | ISBN:9781319456382

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Current Issues and Enduring Questions by Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara - Twelfth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store

Current Issues and Enduring Questions

Twelfth Edition| 2020

Sylvan Barnet; Hugo Bedau; John O'Hara

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