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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Brandon Mayfield? Fingerprint found on a detonator at the scene of the 2004 Madrid train positively identified as belonging to Mayfield FBI put Mayfield under 24-hour surveillance, listened to his phone calls, and surreptitiously searched his home and law office Mayfield was taken into custody on May 6, 2004, and released about two weeks later when FBI admitted it had erred in saying the fingerprints belonged to Mayfield Federal government apologized and settled a lawsuit by Mayfield $2M Mayfield retained the right to challenge parts of the Patriot Act Mayfield did challenge the Patriot Act claiming that secret searches of his house and office under FISA violated the Fourth Amendment Ruling yesterday upheld his claimsRuling yesterday upheld his claims
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold2 Writing Arguments (Chapter 4) Logos, Ethos, and Pathos
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold3 Definitions Rhetoric The study of elements used in writing or speaking The art of effective expression and persuasive use of language Logos Internal consistency and clarity of the message and the logic of its reason and support (i.e., logical appeal) Ethos Credibility of the author Conveyed through tone and style, care of alternative views, writers reputation, etc. Pathos Audience’s imaginative sympathies; their capacity to feel and see what the writer feels and sees
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold4 Rhetorical Triangle Logos - internal consistency and clarity, logic of reasons and support (logical appeal) Ethos - credibility of arguer, care in presenting alternate views, writer investment in claims, possibly reputation for honesty and expertise (ethical appeal) Pathos - appealing to audiences imaginative sympathies, making argument palpable and immediate Arguments: Claims with Reasons
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold5 Rhetorical Triangle Logos - internal consistency and clarity, logic of reasons and support (logical appeal) Ethos - credibility of arguer, care in presenting alternate views, writer investment in claims, possibly reputation for honesty and expertise (ethical appeal) Pathos - appealing to audiences imaginative sympathies, making argument palpable and immediate Arguments: Claims with Reasons
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold6 Message (LOGOS: How can I make the argument consistent and logical? How can I find the best reasons and evidence? Audience (PATHOS: How can I make the reader open to my message? How can I appeal to the reader’s values and interests? Writer or Speaker: (ETHOS: How can I present myself effectively? How can I enhance my credibility and trustworthiness? Rhetorical Triangle
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold7 Facts What are they? A fact is a non-controversial piece of data that is verifiable through observation or through appeal to communally accepted authorities. Facts can increase persuasiveness by having Recency. What’s the latest data? Representativeness. Are the supporting examples typical rather than extreme or rare. Sufficiency. Are there enough examples to justify the point. (No hasty generalization.)
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold8 Issue Questions are the Basis of Argument Issue question: controversial question that gives rise to alternative answers. Issue versus information questions Some questions merely call for more information, not argument. In answering an information question, you assume the role of a teacher. But if you must assume the role of an advocate, then the question is an issue question. Also if the facts of the answer are controversial, then the question is an issue question.
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold9 Issue Questions are the Basis of Argument Issue question: controversial question that gives rise to alternative answers. Issue versus information questions Some questions merely call for more information, not argument. In answering an information question, you assume the role of a teacher. But if you must assume the role of an advocate, then the question is an issue question. Also if the facts of the answer are controversial, then the question is an issue question.
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold10 Arguments VS Pseudo Arguments A genuine argument requires
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold11 Arguments VS Pseudo Arguments A genuine argument requires Reasonable participants who operate within the conventions of reasonable behavior. Potentially shareable assumptions that can serve as a starting place or foundation for the argument. Otherwise, it is a pseudo-argument: Fanatical believers or fanatical skeptics Lack of shared assumptions
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold12 Arguments: Claims Supported by Reasons What is a reason? A reason is a claim used to support another claim. Reasons are usually linked to their claims with words like because, thus, since, consequently, and therefore to underscore their logical connection. Formulating lists of reasons for the competing views can break the persuasive task into more manageable subtasks. A good way to formulate an argument is to create a working thesis statement that summarizes your main reasons as because clauses attached to your claim. However, be aware of the opposing points of view.
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CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold13 Class Exercise In groups of three, for each group member Consider that member’s term-paper topic as an issue Create at least five because clauses to support each side of the issue—i.e., five for the claim, five against the claim—member keeps track of the issues for his/her topic
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