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What is Rhetoric?

Published on Oct 03, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

What is Rhetoric?

A Look at the most important question a philosopher will ever ask…
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Argument or Agreement?

  • Rhetoric is the ancient art of argumentation and discourse.
  • Aristotle called it, "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.”
  • When we write or speak to convince others of what we believe, we are "rhetors."
  • When we analyze the way rhetoric works, we are "rhetoricians."
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Philosophy & Its Influences

  • The earliest known studies of rhetoric come from the Golden Age, when philosophers of ancient Greece discussed logos, ethos, and pathos (philosophy’s three persuasive audience appeals)
  • Aristotle is the Greek philosopher who used these types of rhetoric the most often in his discourses; his use of rhetoric has earned him the title of most influential philosopher in history.
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The 3 Appeals

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Logos

  • A well reasoned argument or rational discourse.
  • The Sophists (those who followed Sophocles) used the term to mean discourse.
  • Aristotle applied the term to refer to "reasoned discourse“ or "the argument" as relates to persuasive public speech in the field of rhetoric.