Charitably imagine how de Beauvoir, from her Ethics of Ambiguity, would argue for or against a significant argument from English’s “What do Adult Children Owe Their Parents,” then argue for or against that imagined argument.

Charitably imagine how de Beauvoir, from her Ethics of Ambiguity, would argue for or against a significant argument from English’s “What do Adult Children Owe Their Parents,” then argue for or against that imagined argument.

In five pages

1) explain to your reader the bare minimum needed to know from either English’s “What do Adult Children Owe Their Parents”or de Beauvoir’s Ethics of Ambiguity, depending on the one you exclusively focus on in your essay;

2) argue for or against one significant argumentative claim made by either English’s “What do Adult Children Owe Their Parents”or de Beauvoir’s Ethics of Ambiguity (note, your essay should exclusively focus in on one of the two authors); and

3) defend your argument against a naysayer.