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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. From one end of the spectrum to the other, the extent to which both Jutel and Atkinson can be considered authorities in writing their respective essays speaks to the expertise that can be applied to a learned professional or an individual who has lived what he preaches. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFatness.rtf
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the expertise that can be applied to a learned professional or an individual who has lived what he preaches. Jutel (2003), an RN and Ph.D., possesses the credentials to
assert with great authority the reasons behind why fat fixation has become such an epidemic; by the same token, Atkinsons (2002) only qualifications are those he has experienced first hand
in an ongoing attempt to maintain an appropriate weight. While each offers respective treatment of the topic at hand, neither can be considered more or less of an authority
based solely upon the letters that come after his or her name, particularly when one is an in-depth, research article published in a medical journal and the other is a
personal column published in a monthly community magazine. Jutel (2003) draws upon twenty-five authoritative sources as a means by which to comprise the vast amount of information found in her
journal article, which - when looking strictly at the academic value of her piece - adds tremendously to the overall credibility. Indeed, there is no denying the impact that
scholarly sources have upon the intrinsic integrity associated with a given article, however, this is not the only way in which credibility can be established, particularly when the need for
scholarly reference is not applicable as in Atkinsons (2002) essay. Atkinson (2002), whose only resource is his own experience, draws from personal episodes throughout his life in order to
illustrate how the common, average individual reading his column is able to relate on an everyday basis. While Jutel (2003) reaches back into history to illustrate her key points,
readily alluding to the Greek New Testament, a fifth century writer and "discourse of the early twentieth century" (pp. 68-72), Atkinson (2002) goes only as far as his own growth
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