Rhetorical Appealsx
Download
Report
Transcript Rhetorical Appealsx
Mr. Coyne
You
need a section in your notebook for
argument
To
begin with, set up a page like this:
Rhetoric
is the art of persuasion; a set of
tactics used to persuade
Short
history of argument
www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCNKREL67rg
Argument
tactics ( the art of rhetoric)
consist of
Author/Audience/Purpose, and
Logic,
Ethics, and Emotion
Who
Who
is speaking. What is their background?
are they at this moment, on this
occasion?
Who
is listening?
Are
they friendly or hostile to what the
author has to say?
Is
the author/audience a good match?
What
is the author trying to put forth to the
audience?
Is
she or he making an argument/trying to be
persuasive?
Or
simply “preaching to the choir”
Greek
word for
Logical appeal
An argument tactic
that would include
facts, stats, and
evidence.
“4 out of 5 doctors
agree that…”
“But Captain…”
Greek
word for Ethical Appeal, or an appeal
to character, morals, values
An
argument tactic that would appeal to
your sense of what is right and wrong
Political
speeches are filled with ethos: “A
good American would…”
Sense
of Credibility provides ethos as well,
and this comes from your reputation or your
performance
Ethos
helps people believe you. If your
argument is well written, this can help
provide a sense of ethos
Nobel
2003
Prize Winner
Ice
T has credibility as
a rapper, actor, and
public figure.
This gives him Ethos.
Pathos
is a Greek word that means Emotion
This persuasive tactic might include pictures,
words, etc. that appeal to your emotional
side
“Save the Arctic Seals!”
Topic/Message
(Logical Appeals)
Context
Audience/Readers
(Emotional Appeals)
Speaker/Writer
(Ethical Appeals)
A
good argument tries to have equal amounts
of logos, ethos, pathos.
Too
much or little of one of the 3 can make
your argument unbalanced
Bored
to tears with facts/stats
Lose credibility by not seeming human (like
Spock)
Not everybody understands the data
Data is not human, has no credibility on its
own (without interpretation)
Lose
your audience by being too full of
morals/values with nothing else
Your audience might think you are full of
yourself
Relying too much on your credibility will
diminish your credibility
Pulling
on heartstrings only without facts and
judgment to back it up can lose your
audience by
“Compassion fatigue…”
Where’s the data?
Who are you anyway?
Takes
into account Author, Audience,
Purpose, Logos, Ethos, Pathos in EQUAL
Measure
AAPPLE
Try
to think of everything that you read and
write as an argument
It is making a case for something
A work of fiction is arguing for a certain
reality
Ads,
movies, stop signs, anything visual uses
the tools of rhetoric in the same way
Color, shape, background, imagery all add to
an argument
Political propaganda tries to make a visual
argument…
Watch
out for these elements when you are
reading an ad, newspaper editorial, or
Listening
to Political commentators and
especially Politicians themselves!
Sharpen
your tools of
rhetoric!