Research your chosen subject area. Visit your local library to research and find resources addressing Good vs Evil. Based on your preliminary research brainstorm specific areas you can use as focus points for your thesis.
Narrow your research and develop a key argument or hypothesis for the Good vs Evil concept. Being an expansive theme choosing a niche area to focus your research can allow you to shed light onto areas with more detail. You will need to support your main argument with credible research sources and information.
Outline the basic structure of your thesis from introduction to conclusion and list possible subsection topics you want to include. Meet with your thesis adviser to discuss your research and any suggestions for more information too look into before you begin to write.
Create a folder on your computer for your thesis research and a sub-folder for writing drafts and outlines. Rewrite or scan your outline on your computer and save the document. As you write, save drafts of your paper after adding each section or alternatively draft each section as a separate document, and incorporate them into a second document for your rough draft of the full thesis paper.
Write a general introduction section for your thesis. In your first draft the introduction need only address the key points you will discuss throughout the thesis. A broad introduction can be edited later for finer detail but having a road map for your paper can help focus your writing as you go.
Insert a subheading for your first main area of discussion such as Good in society, Good in Religion, or symbols of Good in cultures. Discuss the information you have collected through your research and the arguments presented based on your findings.
Continue to compose subsections for each of the main areas of your discussion. Compose a section in your thesis that compares your arguments and conclusions to the research you have referenced. Highlight the differences in theories and why your theory or idea is the better argument.
Write the conclusion section of you paper. Address the main argument stated in your introduction and state your final interpretation based on the research.
Read your draft through and check that you have included transitional phrases and sentences so that your paper flows coherently from each section to the conclusion. Re-read your introduction and conclusion and make sure that the points highlighted in the introduction are resolved and referenced in the conclusion.
Print the full rough draft of your thesis. Check your thesis for grammatical errors and typos and set it aside. Wait for a day or two and check the paper for errors and coherence again then correct the mistakes you have found in a final draft of your paper and print.