Y10W12WR The Good Life and Material Conditions

Part 1

How to Write

Analytical – Analytical essay

An analytical essay examines a concept, tension or debate by building a carefully reasoned argument from evidence and close reasoning. It is written for a reader who expects intellectual rigour and genuine engagement with complexity. The tone is measured, precise and confident — argument built from evidence, not assertion.

  • Ideas & content: Develop a clear central claim and support it with specific, well-selected evidence. Go beyond surface observation to examine what the evidence implies, assumes or reveals about the larger question.
  • Structure & cohesion: Establish your claim early, develop it through a logical sequence of points and return to it at the close. Each paragraph should advance the argument, not simply add information. Use analytical transitions to show how ideas connect.
  • Voice & audience: Write with intellectual authority and precision. Avoid hedging unnecessarily, but acknowledge genuine complexity where it exists. Demonstrate that you have engaged seriously with the question.
  • Language choices: Use precise analytical vocabulary throughout. Academic verbs such as suggests, reveals, implies, challenges and demonstrates signal the kind of thinking required. Avoid vague or casual phrasing.
  • Conventions: Maintain formal academic conventions throughout. Spell analytical vocabulary accurately. Use punctuation to manage complex syntax. Proofread for clarity in your most demanding sentences.

Common pitfalls: Describing or summarising instead of analysing — every paragraph should be building an argument, not just presenting information. Introducing ideas without connecting them to your central claim, which fragments the essay rather than developing a unified position.

Part 2

Your Task Plan for Today

The brief

Question: Write an analytical piece examining what each writer assumes about the relationship between material circumstances and human flourishing. Where does each argument have genuine strength, and where does it fail to account for something important? What does this disagreement reveal about whose experience tends to shape how we think and write about the good life?

Stimulus: An economist writes:

The evidence on wellbeing is now fairly clear: beyond the point at which basic needs are reliably met, additional wealth contributes very little to lasting happiness. People adapt to improved material circumstances quickly and return to roughly their prior level of life satisfaction. What actually predicts sustained wellbeing is the quality of close relationships, a sense of purpose and the experience of meaningful work. Societies that treat wealth accumulation as the primary measure of a good life are organising themselves around a goal that does not deliver what it promises.

A social mobility researcher writes:

The argument that wealth does not produce happiness is a comfortable one to make from a position of security. For people who cannot reliably pay rent, cover a medical bill or give their children the same starting point as their classmates, material improvement is not a luxury concern — it is the precondition for everything else the wellbeing researchers value. Dismissing wealth as insufficient for happiness from a position of wealth is not an insight. It is a failure of perspective. Relationships, purpose and meaning are harder to sustain without economic security, not easier.

Task Analysis: This task asks you to examine different perspectives on a question carefully. Rather than arguing for one position, you must analyse what each view reveals about values and assumptions. A strong response acknowledges genuine complexity and explores the tensions between reasonable but competing ideas.

Quick Plan

Before you write, plan:

  • Position A — what is the first perspective? What does it assume or value?
  • Position B — what is the second perspective? What does it assume or value?
  • Strengths — where is each view most compelling?
  • Limitations — what might each view overlook?
  • The deeper question — what does this disagreement reveal?

Central claim

State your analytical insight clearly. Don’t just describe the positions—identify what they reveal about underlying values, assumptions or tensions. This is your thesis.

Evidence selection

Choose specific examples, quotations or details that show what each position actually claims. Ground your analysis in real material, not paraphrasing.

Technique spotlight

Notice how different arguments are constructed. What language, metaphors or reasoning patterns does each use? What does this reveal about what the position values?

Analysis (how/why)

Explain why different thoughtful people reach different conclusions. What real concerns or values drive each perspective? Show the internal logic of each view.

Reader effect

Consider what each argument makes readers feel, believe or assume. What appeals does each use? Which assumptions feel natural? Why might different readers find different positions persuasive?

Link back to question

Return to your central analytical question. What does examining these perspectives reveal? What conclusions follow? What tensions remain unresolved?