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Classical Rhetoric

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Reasoning with logos ... Using logos, pathos and ethos on your audience ... your parents for a later curfew, they most likely will be persuaded by logos: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Classical Rhetoric


1
Classical Rhetoric
  • The Art of Persuading Your Audience

2
What is rhetoric?
  • Aristotle first defined rhetoric as the power to
    see the possible ways of persuading people about
    a given subject.
  • Teenagers are natural masters of rhetoric- they
    easily use language in hopes to persuade their
    friends, teachers and parents.
  • Rhetoric is everywhere! Whether its a politician
    using it for a vote, a teenager peer pressuring a
    friend or an adult writing a report at work-
    everyone uses rhetoric in some form or another.
  • If a students understand how they can use
    rhetoric in their assignments, they will have the
    power to write effectively.

3
Three ways to master rhetoric
  • Logos
  • Pathos
  • Ethos

4
Logos
  • Logos is the appeal for reason and logic
  • Everything has facts and everyone needs facts in
    order to be convinced
  • So, step one is to make sure you are using facts
    to back up your ideas when writing and speaking
  • For example, Studies show 9 out of 10 teachers
    prefer students who participate in class.

5
Reasoning with logos
  • A fact is simply something you know exists or
    something you can verify with experimentation
  • Two ways to use facts for your argument are
    inductive and deductive reasoning

6
Inductive Reasoning
  • Inductive reasoning is when you use specific
    facts to reason general conclusions or
    generalizations
  • Think of a triangle- you start with specific
    points and get broader with your statements
  • In science you might collect specific data during
    a lab and then write a summary or analysis at the
    end to explain your conclusions
  • As a child you might have liked how fire looked
    but after burning your hand while trying to touch
    it, you inductively reasoned that touching the
    fire equals pain.

7
Deductive Reasoning
  • When you reason deductively, you begin with a
    generalization and back it up with specific
    points.
  • In essays you may have a major premise or main
    idea that you want to back up with specific
    examples.
  • Think of an upside down triangle- you start broad
    and get into narrow details
  • As a teenager you may generalize that homework
    should not be given on the weekends. You may
    then support that statement with examples of how
    no homework on the weekend would allow you
    quality time with friends and family. You may
    even deductively reason that homework takes away
    from spending time with those you love.

8
Pathos
  • Pathos is the appeal toward emotions
  • In order to convince your audience you must
    appeal to your audiences emotions
  • Even if you cannot convince the audience of your
    point, you must at least evoke some emotion,
    response, reaction or move/touch them in some
    powerful way
  • Chances are you only learn from teachers who make
    you feel something in class rather than teachers
    who bore you with facts in a monotone voice

9
Ethos
  • Ethos is the appeal to the audience
  • In order for your audience to believe your facts
    and be affected by emotions, they must believe
    that you are a credible and reliable source
  • There are many ways to show off your character or
    expertise correct grammar, high diction (vocab),
    citing a credible source and explaining extensive
    background knowledge on a subject
  • Yoo probabley woudnt lissen to a english teacher
    if he wroat licke this
  • Bottom line if you dont sound like you know
    what youre talking about, no one will listen

10
Audience
  • In order to have ethos and appeal to the
    audience, you must first understand who your
    audience is and for what purpose youre writing.
  • If you were writing a high school sweetheart in
    class it might read Hey baby, I dig you
  • If you wrote a different letter to your
    grandparents it might start with Dear grandma
    and grandpa,
  • And if you wrote a business letter for a class
    assignment, it would probably read Dear Hiring
    Official
  • As you can see, you must, must, must, must
    understand who you are writing to and why you are
    writing- even for essays and lab reports

11
Using logos, pathos and ethos on your audience
  • Depending on your audience, some will appeal more
    to logos rather than pathos and visa versa but a
    mixture of both need to be included
  • If you were trying to convince your parents for a
    later curfew, they most likely will be persuaded
    by logos facts about where youll be going, who
    youll be going with, what youll be doing and
    how they can reach you. However, even though
    they may appeal more to logos, its not a bad
    idea to throw a little pathos in as well.
  • On the flip side, if you are trying to peer
    pressure your friend who is afraid of heights to
    go on a high roller coaster, statements full of
    pathos will work best Come on chickenbawk,
    bawk, bawk, bawk Even though peer pressure is
    just a manipulation of emotions, some teens might
    need some logos thrown in (like the safety facts
    etc)
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