Including Counter Arguments in Essays
When you include counterargument in your essays, you consider a possible argument against your thesis or a part of your reasoning; it allows you to anticipate doubts and objections that a sceptical reader might have. It must be a legitimate point though – don’t include one just for the sake of it.
You need to consider counterarguments before you write your essay; if there are too many counter arguments, it suggests that you haven’t proposed a very good argument!
How to counter-argue
Your counterargument has two parts: you acknowledge that there may be an objection to your idea and then you explain why that objection is wrong.
- You could introduce the counterargument with a phrase like this:
- One might object here that…
- It might seem that…
- Admittedly, some readers might think…
- Of course, it could be argued that…
- You state the case against yourself briefly but clearly, including evidence where possible.
- You then turn back to your own argument using a signposting word such as but, yet, however, nevertheless or still and then carefully do one of the following:
- refute the counterargument, showing why it is wrong.
- acknowledge the validity or plausibility of the counterargument but suggest why it’s less important or less likely than what you propose and thus doesn’t overturn it.
- concede the validity of the counterargument and adjust your idea accordingly. You may need to restate your thesis in a more exact, qualified, or nuanced way that takes account of the objection, or start a new section in which you consider your topic in light of it. This will work if the counterargument concerns only an aspect of your argument; if it undermines your whole case, you might need a new thesis!
Where to counter-argue
Counterargument can appear anywhere in the essay. For example, it can be:
- Part of your introduction, before you propose your thesis to show that the existence of a different view is the reason for your essay.
- A paragraph just after your introduction, in which you explain the expected reaction or general position before going on to develop your own.
- Within a paragraph, where you include a counterargument to the sub-idea that the paragraph is arguing or is about to argue.
- A paragraph just before the conclusion of your essay, in which you imagine what someone might object to about what you have argued.