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Aristotelian Appeals: Logos, Ethos, and Pathos Whenever you read an argument you must ask yourself, “Is this persuasive? If so, why? And to whom?” There are many ways to appeal to an audience. Among them are appealing to logos, ethos, and pathos. These appeals are identifiable in almost all arguments. To Appeal to LOGOS (logic, reasoning) To Develop or Appeal to ETHOS (character, ethics) To Appeal to PATHOS (emotion) : the argument/message itself; the reasoning the : how an author builds credibility & trustworthiness author uses; logical evidence : words or passages an author uses to activate emotions in his/her audience Types of LOGOS Appeals Types of PATHOS Appeals Theories / scientific facts Indicated meanings or reasons Literal or historical analogies Definitions Factual data & statistics Quotations Citations from experts & authorities Informed opinions Examples (real-life examples) Personal anecdotes Effect on Audience Ways to Develop ETHOS Author’s profession / background Author’s publication Appearing sincere, fair minded, knowledgeable Conceding to opposition where appropriate Morally / ethically likeable Appropriate language for audience and subject Appropriate vocabulary Correct grammar Professional format Effect on Audience Emotionally loaded language Vivid descriptions Emotional examples Anecdotes, testimonies, or narratives about emotional experiences or events Figurative language Emotional tone (humor, sarcasm, disappointment, excitement, etc.) Effect on Audience Evokes a cognitive, rational response. Helps reader to see the author as reliable, trustworthy, Evokes an emotional response. Persuasion by Readers get a sense of, “Oh, that makes sense” competent, and credible. The reader might respect the emotion. (usually evoking fear, sympathy, or “Hmm, that really doesn’t prove anything.” author or his/her views. empathy, anger) Counterargument / Concession / Refutation: 1. ACKNOWLEDGE the arguments against your thesis / points you make 2. CONCEDE (if necessary) any points you know you can't win 3. Use a TRANSITION (BUT, HOWEVER...) to twist back into your refutation. Example: Some may argue that texting while driving leads to people dying. It's true the people who have lost loved ones at the hands of distracted drivers have been devastated. I couldn't possibly understand their pain. However, anything in a car can distract us--changing the channel, drinking a coffee, reading a billboard--so it's unfair to blame the cell phone for the accident. People who are irresponsible drivers and let themselves be distracted deserve to have their license taken away or not given one in the first place.