Communication without Agents? From Agent-Oriented to
... 2. Observability and unobservability. Any message can be seen from two perspectives: as a physical representation of an inception or as physical representation of a reception. A message, according to our theory of communication, is an empirically perceivable object. However, it is an object of a ver ...
... 2. Observability and unobservability. Any message can be seen from two perspectives: as a physical representation of an inception or as physical representation of a reception. A message, according to our theory of communication, is an empirically perceivable object. However, it is an object of a ver ...
Year 10 | Unit 2
... 2. Every novel has an important message that the author would like to convey. Why is this message important to the novel’s target audience? ...
... 2. Every novel has an important message that the author would like to convey. Why is this message important to the novel’s target audience? ...
Persuasion
... – But the more vivid (strong, clear images) the example, the more persuasive it is • “You would have a hole in your wall the size of a basketball!” ...
... – But the more vivid (strong, clear images) the example, the more persuasive it is • “You would have a hole in your wall the size of a basketball!” ...
Rhetoric
... Breaking something down into its essential parts to understand how and why those parts work together to accomplish something (what + how and why) Versus “summary” (what) ...
... Breaking something down into its essential parts to understand how and why those parts work together to accomplish something (what + how and why) Versus “summary” (what) ...