What are some good books to add to my arsenal for the SAT essay portion?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around recommendations for books that can enhance one's preparation for the essay portion of the SAT, particularly focusing on philosophical texts and their applicability in constructing arguments. Participants share their reading lists and suggest additional works that may provide useful examples for essay writing.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant lists several philosophical works they have read and seeks further recommendations to strengthen their essay writing skills.
  • Another participant asserts that SAT essay reviewers focus primarily on spelling and grammar, which is contested by others who argue that the quality of the argument is also evaluated.
  • Some participants suggest specific authors and works, such as Rand for Individualism, Sartre or Camus for Existentialism, and William James for Pragmatism, as valuable additions to the reading list.
  • A participant acknowledges their current reading of Sartre's Nausea and expresses gratitude for the reminder to consider other authors.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

There is disagreement regarding the criteria used by SAT essay reviewers, with some participants believing that content quality is important while others maintain that only spelling and grammar are considered. The discussion remains unresolved on this point.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference various philosophical texts and their relevance to essay writing without reaching a consensus on the best approach or the most effective books.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals preparing for the SAT essay portion, particularly those interested in philosophy and argumentation techniques.

Sak
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Hello. I am a n00b who stumbled across this forum looking for physics help.

Now I have a question for the philosophy buffs:

As you may know, the new SAT I and the SAT II Writing both have an essay portion. There is a general statement with which you agree or disagree. Most of the statements are things like "Ignorance is Bliss" or "To learn is to teach". The best strategy, when combating these essays, is to use a personal example, a historical example, and an example in literature/philosophy.

What are some good books to add to my arsenal?


I already have read Protagoras, Symposium, Gorgias, Phaedro, Discourse on the Origins of Inequality, Tao te Ching, Candide, and Beyond Good and Evil. I have also read some books which are not philosophical works but help in variety of ways, such as Lord of the Flies (helps with group vs. individual, fundament of human character), Brave New World (technology vs. humanity, enjoying the simpiler things), Moby Dick (I don't know how this will help, but my SAT tutor thinks it will), and many others. On my to read list is the Social Contract, Civilization and its Discontents, Nausea, and the Gay Science.

Thanks for any help.
 
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I don't believe the reviewers are supposed to rate the content: what you actually say, or how eloquently you say it. They are mostly looking for spelling and grammar errors.

- Warren
 
chroot said:
I don't believe the reviewers are supposed to rate the content: what you actually say, or how eloquently you say it. They are mostly looking for spelling and grammar errors.

- Warren

I don't mean to be arguementative, but that's absolutely not true, at least for the SAT I. They are looking at your argument and how well you argue it on a scale of 1 to 6. Then the scores are combined with another person who grades on the exact same scale looking for the exact same stuff. Trust me, we've looked into it, and seen actually essays and their actual scores. I saw an essay, that would get a C grade in spelling, grammar, and concision, yet had a coherent argument and still scored a six.

You just have to trust me on this one :smile:
 
Okay, you're right, Sak. It's been a long time since I took the SAT, and it didn't involve any writing assignments back then.

- Warren
 
Try Rand for Individualism, Sartre or Camus for Existentialism, and William James for Pragmatism.
 
Gokul43201 said:
Try Rand for Individualism, Sartre or Camus for Existentialism, and William James for Pragmatism.

Thanks for reminding me! I'm actually reading Nausea by Sartre right now! I'm sorry I forgot to say it.
 

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