To Kill A Mockingbird Ethos Pathos Logos

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“The one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.” In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Atticus uses Pathos, ethos and logos to convince Tom Robinson could never have committed this crime. Atticus is fighting the inevitable battle of racism and trying to prove a black man's innocence in court. His strength and intelligence is about to change at least one person in the jury to look past his skin color and see him as an equal. Taking this one small step forward is a major step for the equality of everyone. Atticus most effectively uses emotionally charged language while being respectful in his final remarks to elicit emotions and sympathy to strengthen his facts to bring justice to Tom Robinson. Atticus identifies Tom’s human characteristics to garner sympathy from the jury. Throughout his final remarks on the case he uses certain words to make the audience see Tom as a human worthy of respect and justice. Here, Atticus provides the evidence where the court and jury have prejudice towards Tom. He was helping Mayella when she took advantage of him and kissed him, but her father sees this and …show more content…

He uses the evidence of logos because without proof you can not blame a person. In the courtroom Atticus states that this case should have not gone to trial because there is no real evidence that a crime was committed by the hands of Tom. Atticus informs, “The State has not produced one iota of medical evidence that the crime Tom Robinson is charged with ever took place.” When sheriff Tate was called, a doctor was not called as well to examine Mayella. With the examination they would be able to prove if it was forced and have her wounds treat but with out this evidence they can not provide that she was raped and that it is connected to Tom Robinson. Without facts and evidence to prove someone's guilt it's impossible to convict them of the