Stephen Burrell

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Rhetoric and the art of persuasion

Image c/o TED ED

When we have conflicting views over truth, we often enter into a game of persuasion where we try to convince the other that the belief we hold is, in fact, the true one. Rhetoric creates a partnership for a system of persuasion based on knowledge instead of upon manipulation and omission. Over 2,000 years ago the Greek philosopher Aristotle argued that there were three basic ways to persuade an audience of your position: ethos, logos, and pathos. To craft a good persuasive argument, we must consider these three things.

1.         The character of the speaker (ethos)
2.         The condition of the listener (logos)
3.         The strength and plausibility of the argument itself (pathos)