Critical Thinking – PHI 210 Student Course Guide Prerequisite: None Quarter Meeting Days/Time Instructor Instructor Phone Instructor E-mail Instructor Office Hours/Location Academic Office Phone Number Strayer Technical Support 1-877-642-2999 INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIAL — Required Kirby‚ G. R.‚ & Goodpaster‚ J.R. (2007). Thinking: An interdisciplinary approach to critical and creative thought (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River‚ NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall. INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIAL — Supporting The
Free Critical thinking Logic Reasoning
Specifically‚ the definition of an enthymeme and how Sanders used it in his speech. That is to say‚ it could be seen in the section where he was speaking about “The struggle of the people to create a government which represents all of us and not just the one percent” (Sanders DNC). As I understand
Premium High school Writing College
I discovered this Kenneth Cole ad in April 2008 issue of Vogue‚ a fashion and lifestyle magazine. Flipping through countless of advertisements‚ one particular ad captured my attention. It was a Kenneth Cole ad featuring Aimee Mullins‚ an athlete‚ actor and activist. The ad‚ “We All Walk in Different Shoes” is‚ or least appears‚ a persuasive fashion advertisement designed to influence women to buy their shoes and clothing products. As the viewer pay close attention to the captions and visible
Premium Advertising Marketing Graphic design
Agency: How was it done? Purpose: Why was it done? The five points of the pentad are the things a person could say not only about a written text but also‚ more broadly‚ about any purposeful or intentional act that communicates meaning. III. The Enthymeme: a syllogism or other argument in which a premise or the conclusion is unexpressed. IV. The Topics: Topics are places a writer might go to discover strategies and
Premium Rhetoric
April 20th‚ 2012 3rd AP Language and Composition Leggett Argumentation and Logical Fallacies Emotional Appeals Scare Tactics= Coercing a favorable response by preying upon an audience’s fears. Anti-drug commercial- This is your brain. These are drugs. This is your brain on drugs. (with the appropriate pictures. Either or choices= making an audience choose between one choice or the other. “Either you’’’ do this or I’ll leave you. Slippery Slope= A fallacy in which a course of action is objected
Premium Logic Fallacy Argument
Reagan uses an appeal to basic needs when he aims at the need for security‚ using abstract language to elicit a strong response. In paragraph 26‚ Reagan declares‚ “When action is required to preserve our national security‚ we will act‚” this offers hope to the audience with the nation’s protection. He reminds the audience he will meet this need‚ and promises a better future. Reagan also appeals to basic values of freedom and progress when he motivates the audience that the economic problems will
Premium
List of Figures Of Speech Personification Personification is all about adding a human trait to an inanimate object or an abstraction. For example: The picture in that magazine shouted for attention. Simile A simile is a figure of speech that compares two unrelated things or ideas using "like" or "as" to accentuate a certain feature of an object by comparing it to a dissimilar object that is a typical example of that particular trait. For example: as big as a bus‚ as clear as a bell‚ as dry as
Premium Figure of speech Rhetoric
Key to Good Speech Ethos: the source’s credibility‚ the speaker’s/author’s authority Logos: the logic used to support a claim (induction and deduction); can also be the facts and statistics used to help support the argument. Pathos: the emotional or motivational appeals; vivid language‚ emotional language and numerous sensory details. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ethos Persuasion from ethos establishes the
Premium Logic Rhetoric Deductive reasoning
Chapter 3 Hypothetical Syllogisms As stated in Chapter 2‚ a hypothetical syllogism is a syllogism with at least one conditional premise‚ that is‚ at least one ―if…then…‖ premise. The ―If…then…‖ relationship may be expressed in ordinary language by using a number of different terms. In checking hypothetical syllogisms expressed in ordinary language for their validity‚ it is therefore useful to be able to translate such conditional vocabulary into standard conditional form. The Vocabulary of Conditional
Premium Logic Modus ponens Argument
Chapter 1 notes Seven Faces of Persuasion- Interactive media – media in which the receiver is able to actively participate in the communication process. Cultural diversity – the increasing numbers of persons from other cultural backgrounds‚ races‚ ethnicities‚ sexual preferences‚ educational levels‚ political and religious beliefs‚ etc. Propaganda – set of messages designed to influence large numbers and warns that it is selective and that it “…presents facts selectively in order to…produce
Premium Rhetoric Attitude change Regulatory Focus Theory