Rhetoric9

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Argument

description

 

Transcript of Rhetoric9

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Argument

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Argument

an attempt to persuade someone of something, by giving reasons or evidence for accepting a particular conclusion

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The

Greeks

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Rhetoric

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Rhetoric

The ways we influence what people do, think, or say.

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The Tree of Rhetoric

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The Tree of Rhetoric

Logos

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The Tree of Rhetoric

Logos

Pathos

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The Tree of Rhetoric

Logos

Pathos

Ethos

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Logical

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Logos

Syllogism:

All students want to Learn

Brenda is a Student

Brenda Wants to Learn

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Logos

Enthymeme:

All students want to Learn

Brenda is a Student

Brenda Wants to Learn

Commonplace--Audience already believes this

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LogosDeductive Reasoning: Reasoning from Principles

We all know that freedom is better than slavery, so a freer school system is clearly better for all

Inductive Reasoning: Reasoning from Experience

In every school system we studied, those with later start times had better attendance and Test Scores

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Logos

Cause/Effect:

If we start school later, Students will learn more

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The Tree of RhetoricPathos

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Emotional

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PathosHow we appeal to the feelings of our audience in order to move them.

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Emotional

Fear, Discrimination, Revenge

Love, C harity, Brotherhood

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Emotional

Use of Figurative Speech: metaphors, rhetorical questions, parallelism

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Is Pathos more or lessEffective/Fair

than Logos in Argumenation?

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The Tree of Rhetoric

Ethos

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Credibility

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Credibility

Persuading by convincing the audience that the speaker is worth listening to

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Credibility

Trustworthiness

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Credibility

Trustworthiness

Similarity

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Credibility

Trustworthiness

Similarity

Special Knowledge

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Credibility

Trustworthiness

Similarity

Special Knowledge

Expert Knowledge

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Credibility

Trustworthiness

Similarity

Special Knowledge

Expert Knowledge:

I want to convince the principal to let students wear political messages on their t-shirts. Which ethos issues should I consider?

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The Tree of Rhetoric

Emotional

Logical

Credibility

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Classical GreekOratory

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Classical Oration

Introduction (Exordium): beginning the web, draw interest

Narration (Narratio): factual info, define the problem

Confirmation (Confirmatio): detail about the arguments, the nuts and bolts of your case

Refutation (Refutatio): addresses counter-arguments, consider audience

Conclusion (Peroratio): satisfying close

I

Never

Called

Rhetoric

Crazy