Aristotle's Three Elements of Rhetoric
Aristotelian rhetoric is split into three different components. They are pathos, ethos, and logos. They are utilized when trying to persuade or inform someone using rhetoric. Rhetoric means you are trying to persuade someone using words in your writing or speaking orally. Rhetoric is the way in which you communicate in everyday life. On a website it states that, “These communications can be persuasive in nature and can be made of text, images, video, or any other type of media.” Everyone uses rhetoric in their life to obtain things that they want.
Humans will utilize rhetoric without even realizing it. When you were a child trying to get your mother or father to buy you a toy from the store, you used
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When using pathos, you are appealing to someone’s emotions. “Pathos refers to appealing to a person by influencing his emotions. Pathos is involved in the strategy of convincing the audience by invoking feelings through their own imaginations.” Most of the time, the emotion that the person persuading you wants you to engage emotions that are positive like joy, hope, happiness, affection, etc. Sometimes they will try to make you feel emotions that make you feel sad for someone or something. Speaking about your personal stories or even others personal stories will make people feel like they are personally involve in your story and it is a good way to appeal to an audiences …show more content…
Logos requires you to construct an argument using facts and or well thought out reasoning. “Logos is frequently translated as some variation of “logic or reasoning,” but it originally referred to the actual content of a speech and how it was organized.” Logos does not mean to only use logic in your writing, you want to use facts and evidence as well. You need to have a strong relationship between your thesis and the evidence that you are providing. Make sure that you include your research and your sources in your presentation so that it will demonstrate logos