1 / 17

Argumentation-Persuasion

Argumentation-Persuasion. English 1301 LR-472. What is Argumentation?. The use of clear thinking and logic, the writer tries to convince readers of the soundness of a particular opinion on a controversial issue. What is Persuasion?.

mendel
Télécharger la présentation

Argumentation-Persuasion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Argumentation-Persuasion English 1301 LR-472

  2. What is Argumentation? • The use of clear thinking and logic, the writer tries to convince readers of the soundness of a particular opinion on a controversial issue.

  3. What is Persuasion? • Using emotional language and dramatic appeals to readers’ concerns, beliefs, and values. • Encourages reader to commit themselves to a course of action.

  4. Argumentation & Persuasion People respond rationally and emotionally to situations, therefore • Argumentation and persuasion are combined.

  5. When Argument and Persuasion Blend … • Emotion supports rather than replaces logic and sound reasoning.

  6. Argumentation-Persuasion and Purpose Writing can be a • Causal analysis • Descriptive piece • Narrative • Definition

  7. More than just a Point of View • Assumes controversy • Addresses opposing viewpoints

  8. According to ancient Greeks ... There are three factors crucial to the effectiveness of argumentation-persuasion: • Logos • Pathos • Ethos

  9. Logos Main concern in essay. The soundness of the argument: • The facts • Statistics • Examples

  10. Logos continued … Authoritative statements • Unified • Specific • Adequate • Accurate • Representative

  11. Pathos Appeals to readers’ • Needs • Values • Attitudes • Encouraging them to commit Advertising & Propaganda rely on pathos to the exclusion of logic.

  12. Ethos Credibility and Integrity • Share experiences • Present a logical, reasoned argument that takes into account the opposing point of view. • Make sure emotions and appeals are not excessive. • Overwrought emotionalism undercuts credibility. Ethos IS NOT constant.

  13. Logos, Pathos, Ethos • Involve an interplay of all three. • Balance is determined bytheaudience. Audience will fall into three broad categories: • Supportive • Wavering • Hostile

  14. The Audience Supportive • Don’t need highly reasoned argument • Solidify support (logos). • Can rely on pathos.

  15. The Audience continued … A Wavering Audience • Open, but not committed. • Concentrate on ethos and logos

  16. The Audience continued … A hostile Audience • An apathetic, skeptical, or hostile audience is the most difficult to convince. • Avoid emotional appeals • Use logical reasoning and hard-to-dispute facts (logos).

  17. Begin • Identify the controversy surrounding the issue and state your position in the thesis. • Provide readers with strong support for the thesis. • Seek to create good will. • Organize the supporting evidence. • Use Rogerian strategy to acknowledge differing viewpoints. (Seek out and acknowledge conflict viewpoints.)

More Related