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Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Dec 18, 2015

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Bryan Nicholson
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Page 1: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Rhetoric

Page 2: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

What is Rhetoric?

Rhetoric:

1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means

Page 3: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

What is Rhetoric?Rhetoric:

The goal of persuasion is to change others’ point of view or to move others to take action.

Page 4: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Who is Aristotle?Aristotle is the most notable product of the educational program devised by Plato. He was Plato’s student. Aristotle wrote on an amazing range of subjects, from logic, philosophy, and ethics to physics, biology, psychology, politics, and (including) rhetoric.

Page 5: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Tools of Rhetoric:Aristotle thought that every argument should

have three main points.

Page 6: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Tools of Rhetoric:Aristotle, the famous philosopher, thought that every argument

should have three main points.

The Rhetorical Triangle

Page 7: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Ethos: (Front of Flap)

(The writers credibility)

Page 8: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Symbol for Ethos

Ethos=

Hand

Page 9: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Ethos:Definition: an appeal to a speaker’s character, credibility, or authority about the subject matter.

In order to convince people to agree with you, you need to establish that you are worth listening to.

If your audience thinks you are trustworthy, knowledgeable, likeable and respectable, they tend to believe you.

Page 10: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Ethos:One of the easiest ways to understand Appeals to Ethos is to think of celebrities and sports heroes endorsing products

Cosmetic companies choose beautiful models to promote their beauty products, but do you think they actually wear them?

Page 11: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Ethos:Also appeals to the character of the audience

ETHICS

Page 12: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Ethos:Deals with the appeal to a characters

sense of right and wrong

sense of justice and fair play

sense of what’s good for the universe

Page 13: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Forced Labor“The reasons for legal intervention in favor

of children apply no less strongly to the case of those unfortunate slaves…animals”

In the 1800s, children were forced to work as tailors and in factories and mines.

 In the profit-driven world of factory farming, the welfare of chickens is a low priority. To provide a cheap consumer product, hens spend their entire lives in wire cages with as many as seven other birds. These "battery cages" are stacked one on top of another. Stress and extremely crowded conditions cause the hens to peck at one another, so farmers cut off a portion of their beaks with a hot blade.

Ethos:

Page 14: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Save Marine Life

Our oceans cover more than two thirds of the planet. They sustain a breathtaking array of marine life. Yet they are struggling to survive their greatest threat – human impact. Wherever they operate, industrial fishing fleets exceed the ocean’s ecological limits. They unravel the intricate web of marine biodiversity that makes the oceans vital to the earth's life support system.

Ethos:

Page 15: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Logos: (Front of Flap)

(Logical Reasoning)

Page 16: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Symbol for Logos

Logos = Head

Page 17: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Logos:Logos is an appeal to logic.

Citing authorities and showing that your argument is well-researched to give an argument credibility.

Page 18: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Logos:Appeal to LogicConvincing someone

that you are reasonable and logical.

Supporting how your way is the best way with facts, evidence and statistics.

Speak to readers’ common sense.

Page 19: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Logos:Persuasive arguments that speak to readers’ common sense and logic. Things like FactsStatisticsExpert opinionsSurveysPolls If, then… statementsDefinitions of termsExplanation of ideasCause and effect

Page 20: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Logos: (Examples)A Snickers bar has 280

calories and 30 grams of sugar. That’s not very healthy.

A recent study found that students who watch violent TV tend to be more aggressive towards others.

One glass of Florida orange juice contains 75% of your daily Vitamin C needs.

Page 21: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos:(Front of Flap)

(The audience’s emotions)

Page 22: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Symbol for Pathos:

Pathos=

Heart

Page 23: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos:Appeal to EmotionsAn appeal to the

emotions

Page 24: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos:Appeal to EmotionsAn audience is

more likely to agree with your positions if you can inspire an emotional connection with them – get them to feel what you feel

Page 25: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos:Examples of Emotions

Angry

Sympathetic

Empowered

Patriotic

Scared

Page 26: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

                      

Pathos

What emotions do you have with these images?

Page 27: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos

What emotions do you have with these images?

Page 28: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos

What emotions do you have with these images?

Page 29: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos

What emotions do you have with these images?

Page 30: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Pathos

What emotions do you have with these images?

Page 31: Rhetoric. What is Rhetoric? Rhetoric: 1) The art of persuasion through written, verbal or visual means.

Overlapping:Pathos, logos, and

ethos are not always separate

Often these appeals overlap one another.

"Nine out of ten dentists choose Crest." This suggests that the dentists are credible experts (ethos), and also includes a statistic (logos).