InstructionAfter participating in Discussions II and III, you should submit Written Exercise I. For this exercise you can choose to write about Plato or Aristotle. Select only one of the prompts below. You should aim to write around 750 words; this is about two double-spaced pages, of Times New Roman, 12pt, font. Elaborate your thoughts well and clearly. Your writing should be at its best: good grammar, good syntax, and no typos. Remember to proofread before submitting. (Also, read through the Written Exercise Rubric). I strongly suggest you submit your exercise as a PDF, since Turnitin works best with it. Keep in mind that plagiarism is penalized in this course. You will submit the Written Exercise through Turnitin. You will be able to see a similarity report before submitting. I will not accept any written exercises that have a similarity report above 30%. If your similarity report is above 30%, you will have to revise your exercise and submit again. Given the criteria, the best strategy to follow is to stick to the main readings, the Prof. Notes, and your own thoughts. This exercise is meant to measure three general areas: writing, reading comprehension, and critical thinking. Thus, aim at writing it on your own, and consulting as minimally as you can any other sources. Quoting is allowed, but it must be minimal. If you are quoting any material, use quotation marks and include the author and title of the source. Prompts: 1) Plato option: Think of one question you would like to ask Plato, or think of a question you had while reading his work—the question must be about his theory of justice as presented in the assigned reading—and answer it as best as you can. In other words, try to answer the question from Plato's perspective. Begin your assignment by explicitly stating your question about Plato's conception of art, and only then answer it.