Saturday, March 7, 2020
102 Egocentric Thinking and Intro to Rhetoric Professor Ramos Blog
102 Egocentric Thinking and Intro to Rhetoric Intro to Rhetoric Quick Write What would someone have to say to convince you to change your mind? Write for two minutes. Vocabulary Egocentric thinking means that we think through our own perspectives. We only have our perspective. Egocentric having or regarding the self or the individual as the center of all things having little or no regard for interests, beliefs, or attitudes other than ones own; self-centered Intellectual Empathy means being able to think through other peoples perspectives. Seeing an issue through more perspectives than your own. This is very important for critical thinking since we want to consider an issue from as many perspectives as possible to better see and understand an issue. We only have our perspective and experience informing how we perceive issues. Critical thinking requires that we get as many perspectives in order to become more informed. We need to place ourselves in others perspectives in order to see if our perspective if fair, just, or biased. Photo by Todd Robertson, courtesy of the Southern Poverty Law Center Our perspective might be biased, racist, prejudiced, incorrect, or ignorant of facts. Intro to Rhetoric Language is an art form. Here is theà Wikipedia definition of Rhetoric. Rhetoricà is the art of discourse, wherein a writer or speaker strives to inform, persuade or motivate particular audiences in specific situations. Aristotleââ¬â¢sà definitionà of rhetoric ââ¬Å"The faculty of observing, in any given case, theà available means of persuasionââ¬Å" Ethos: Appeals to Ethics, Credibility or Character. Ethics, ethical, trustworthiness or reputation, style/tone. The credibility of the speaker persuades. Pathos: Appeals to Emotion. Emotional or imaginative impact, stories, values. Uses emotional response to persuade an audience. Logos: Appeals to logic. Persuade by reason and evidence.
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