How to get an A-
For the last paper, most students received around a C: C-, C+ or just
plain old C. You all want to know how to do better, so here's the best paper so far this semester
- it received an A-. Take the time to read the whole paper. What makes
a good paper is not one good paragraph, but how the whole thing hangs
together.
First, the choice of theme. If you choose something that is obviously
of central importance to a novel, it is hard to say anything new about
it. You won't impress anyone by pointing out that Romeo and Juliet is
about love, or that Peter Pan is about childhood. You need to show that
you have spotted things that aren't obvious to the average reader after
one reading of the novel. At the same time, they must be integral to
the novel. Top hats are mentioned in 1984,
but that doesn't mean an essay about the history of top hats and their
role in one
of the greatest films ever made would be a suitable choice of topic
when writing about 1984.
This paper focuses on the place of Aristotle in Medieavel thought, with
a particular focus on St. Thomas Aquinas. The student gathers together
enough references to Aquinas to indicate that he is a significant
off-stage presence. It is particularly nice to have Jorge's mention of
"...the Dominican buried by Abo." We have been told earlier in the book
that Abo's claim to fame is he helped carry the body of Thomas Aquinas
down a staircase (a difficult job, since St. Thomas was very fat). So
an alert reader will see that
Jorge is here referring to St. Thomas Aquinas. But the average reader,
hurrying to get to the conclusion of the novel, might not remember
which Dominican Abo buried. And there is an interesting point: Jorge is
condemning Aquinas, yet he does not mention him by name. The same is
true of the Condemnations of 1277 - as the student immediately points
out.
Why does this matter? St. Thomas Aquinas is considered by many to be
the definitive Catholic thinker. In the context of contemporary
Catholic theology, citing Aquinas' opinion is a way of demonstrating
that this opinion is acceptable to orthodox Catholics. Brothels should
be legal; a newly conceived foetus does not have a soul (but still, it
would be a mortal sin to kill it); if you are dying of hunger, and you
take the food you need from someone wealthy without permission, that is
not theft. These are ideas that many liberals agree with. A liberal who
cites Aquinas on these topics guards against the accusation that they
are being unorthodox. How could anyone accuse St. Thomas Aquinas of
being a heretic? St. Thomas was, after all, a member of the Dominican
Order, the same order that Bernardo Gui belongs to. The Dominican Order
was founded in order to combat heresy by preaching sound, orthodox
Catholicism, and it was the Dominicans who ran the Inquisition.
As Humberto Eco reminds us, St. Thomas' work was treated with suspicion
by conservative thinkers in the Middle Ages because of his devotion to
Aristotle. Traditionally, Christian philosophers had drawn on the
writings of Plato for inspiration, but, partly as a result of Muslim
influence, there was a resurgence of interest in Aristotle. St. Thomas
wanted to show that, despite what some people thought, Aristotle's
philosophy was not a threat to Christianity. This, in turn, creates a
dilemma for Jorge. He thinks that by giving legitimacy to Aristotle's
works, St. Thomas had undermined the Church. But to openly condemn St.
Thomas (who is characterized by Adso as 'the angelic doctor') would be
to invite questions about one's own orthodoxy. Who is Jorge to hold a
saint to account for heresy?
Jorge, I would argue, really is a heretic. Here, I'm speaking on behalf
of William of Baskerville. William does see heresy as dangerous,
because it is a threat to the social order. It is preferable to have a
society where people submit to the law voluntarily than one where the
only way to enforce laws is by violence. If the law is enforced with
gross injustice, people will rise up and violence will be the result.
That is why William believes the vocation of the Franciscan order is to
bring the lost back into the fold - to make sure that nobody is
excluded from the benefits of civilization. But it remains true that
the Church does have an important role to play as the source of social
unity. What restrained European nations from trying to wipe each other
out in wars, or different social classes from settling conflicts with
violence, was the sense that they were all Christians together. In
order to play this essential role, the Church has to maintain its
unity. Heresy is dangerous because it undermines that unity: if the
Church cannot speak with one voice, it will not have a voice at all.
Without the voice of the Church, how much more violent would the Middle
Ages have been?
Jorge is like a rogue agent. He has ceased to be answerable to his
superiors in the organization, and has taken the law into his own
hands. It is like a CIA agent deciding that he is going to assassinate
Gaddafi, or a Chavez supporter taking it upon himself to plant bombs in
Bogota. Such a person damages their own organization by failing to
follow discipline. The irony is that not only does Bernardo fail to
catch the real murderer, it is William, not Bernardo, who uncovers
someone whose heresy truly threatens the structure of the Church from
within.
Many of the papers students submitted about The Name of the Rose condemned the
evils of the Catholic Church in the Middle Ages. The trouble is not
offense that might be caused to Catholics, but the offense to Umberto
Eco. Within some genres, it is acceptable, even expected, to portray
characters and institutions in stark, unsubtle terms. 1984 is an example. As I said many
times, Orwell is giving us a blue-print of totalitarianism, so he
portrays a society where totalitarianism works like clockwork. O'Brien
never has a moment's hesitation - he really does anticipate every move
his enemies might make. But Eco is trying to give us a taste of
historical reality. In that kind of novel, the ability to paint in
subtle shades is much valued. Characters should combine good and bad
traits, like real people. Of course, Eco does not portray the Church as
a wonderful, blessed institution, free from any taint of evil. The dark
side of the Church is apparent. But if he portrayed it as without
redeeming features, like the Galactic Empire in Star Wars, of
Voldemort's Death Eaters in Harry Potter, or indeed The Party in 1984, that would be a failure as a
novelist. Do not take him for some conjurer of cheap tricks!
So, the chosen theme is a good one. But that isn't the end of the
matter. Many other students chose good themes but did not receive an A.
So next, notice that the paper is well-researched. Not only is there a
mention of the Condemnations of 1277, we are told about the debate
between intellectualists and voluntarists. This, in turn, is applied to
the question of Adso's "sin": his act of love with the girl. Once
again, there is close attention to the text: Adso himself reflects on
the action in the light of Aquinas' teaching. Also, we have here some
added value. You get no marks for pointing out that this scene is of
great importance, but using the Aristotelian theory to analyze Adso's
actions gives us a deeper level of understanding. As well as the work
of Aquinas himself, the student quotes two sources, one by Christopher
Toner from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and a book by James
Walsh. What is important is that the student has read these works
carefully. Anyone can feed a term into J-STOR, come up with a dozen
arguments, and pick a few random sentences to insert into the paper.
Real research involves using sources with discrimination; better to
read and understand two sources, than to quote without thought from
ten.
The paper is not perfect. For example, the final jump from Voluntarism
and Intellectualism to Particularism and Internalism takes place
without any advance preparation, and no real explanation is offered.
And while one sees the connection between Jorge and Augustine, is there
really a link between Jorge and Jon Duns Scotus - (an Oxonian
Franciscan (like William), whose works fell under such suspicion that,
to this day, the word "Dunce" is used as an insult for stupid people)?
The point is not that this paper is perfect, but that even in
expressing disagreement with it, I have to engage my whole mind.
So: it can be done! Keep on trying.
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