How to Write a Thesis Statement
Writing and editing advice from [http://www.goodtermpaper.com]
Before you read this, you should have a strong blueprint in place for your paper's thesis, evidence and presentation.
We know what a thesis is: the idea your paper purports to prove. The thesis statement is actually quite different; it is a literal (literally here, meaning, well, literally, based upon words) representation of the idea of your paper, born actually in your magical mind.
Like the big bang, the thesis is a momentary perception, a flash of insight in which the entire panoramic beauty of the paper, the tangled relationships between the ideas, is fully and completely apprehended in all its splendor.
When you 'get it.'
You actually 'get' your paper in an instant, and no guide or piece of advice can ever substitute for that moment or do it in your place. If you choose to enlist the services of goodtermpaper, somebody else will carefully research your assignment and then 'get' your thesis for you. They will capture a unique idea from the universal currents. They might read up on Plato in the afternoon, jotting down idea for an outline. But it may be over dinner, or the next morning, that the flash of insight occurs. The flash is really a reward for hard work and careful consideration- some 'portion' of your being, your mental focus, must be invested in the problem.
Your thesis cannot simply be lifted from the work of another author, and it cannot be a recitation of that which we already know. Rather, it must be your original and unique contribution to the scholarly world. Your thesis can be based upon the ideas of others, and include some of their notions, but in the end, it is all you. It should be a synthesis of all your careful reading and thinking.
This article was written by the Editor in Chief at http://www.Goodtermpaper.com.