Aristotle “The Naturalist”. Aristotle Born in 384. From the northwestern edge of the Greek Empire in Stagira. Father was physician to King Amyntas of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Guide to Ethos, Pathos, and Logos for “WAY SMART” Middle School Students By Chuck Bennett.
Advertisements

Aristotle was the greatest scientist of the ancient world. He believed in using logic and reason to explain natural events in an era when most people believed.
ENGL 2900 The Rhetorical Pedagogy. What is it? Rhetoric is the art of finding the best available means of persuading a specific audience in a specific.
The History of Persuasion
Great Philosophers of Ancient Greece: Plato and Aristotle James A. Van Slyke, Ph.D.
What is Rhetoric?. Definition of Rhetoric Rhetoric (n) - the art of speaking or writing effectively. Content = WHAT Rhetoric = HOW.
Aristotle Knowledge comes from experience.. It would be erroneous to call anyone the father of all knowledge, but if such a title were to be given to.
The Ancient Greeks Aristotle Ἀριστοτέλης.
Aristotle Born in 384. From the northwestern edge of the Greek Empire in Stagira. Father was physician to King Amyntas of Macedonia.
Aristotle Robert Hoover A-4 4/29/13. Background Student of Plato and teacher of Alexander The Great. He was a Greek philosopher. Born 384 B.C. Died 322.
Persuasion Rhetoric: The art of persuasion.
Ethos, Pathos and Logos Tuesday, November 18th, 2014
Philosophers.
Created by: Madeleine Leigh The Life of Aristotle.
Ethos Logos Pathos. Rhetoric is the technique that speakers, writers, artists, filmmakers use to convince their audience to agree with their point of.
Aristotle Born in 384. From the northwestern edge of the Greek Empire in Stagira. Father was physician to King Amyntas of Macedonia.
 Aristotle was born into a Macedonian royal family in a town called Stagira in the year 384 B.C.  Aristotle and his dad almost had similar education.
Introduction to Greek Philosophy That is, the really important Greek philosophy.
Greek Philosophy and the Legacy in American Government
The Forum: Aristotle’s Model of Communication. Who is Aristotle? A philosopher who lived in ancient Greece about 2300 years ago. He thought and wrote.
When you come in… 1.Copy homework: Find an advertisement from a newspaper or magazine that uses ethos, pathos or logos & bring it in to class! 2.Quiz on.
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion The history of rhetoric and the concepts of ethos, pathos and logos began in Greece.
The Peripatetic School Aristotle Aristotle Came to Athens from northern Greece (Stagira) to study with Plato. Left the Academy probably after.
Legacy of the Ancient Greeks
WHAT IS RHETORICAL ANALYSIS? Rhetorical analysis focuses on how a text persuades its readers, not what it is attempting to persuade them; but, how that.
Definition of Rhetoric Rhetoric (n.)- The art of speaking or writing effectively. (In other words, HOW we give the impressions we give; HOW we say what.
The Story of Ancient Greece Copy the notes as they appear.
Aristotle A Greek philosopher Reina Jackson. Aristotle  tle
Aristotle Knowledge comes from experience.. Aristotle: A Brief Biography BCE BCE Born in Stagira, Greece in Thrace, near Macedonia Born.
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade Logos Ethos Pathos.
The Categories of Persuasion By Marsha Barrow “Knowledge, it has been said, is power. And rhetoric is what gives words power.”
Of the modes of persuasion furnished by the spoken word there are three kinds. [...] Persuasion is achieved by the speaker's personal character when the.
Rhetorical Techniques.  Rhetoric is the art of speaking or writing formally and effectively as a way to persuade or influence people.  Rhetoric improves.
The Persuasive Essay This lesson will give you the language you need to start analysing the effectiveness of persuasive essays.
Aristotle By: Pratyu Chundu Morrison- 1 st hour Edcanvas project Due: March 13, 2013.
Socrates once said, “There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance. Do you believe this? Explain why or why not”.
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade Logos Ethos Pathos.
Aristotle ( BC). Aristotle was born in 384 BC in Halkidiki, a Greek island. His father was the personal doctor to the king of Macedonia. He was.
Logos Ethos Pathos. Aristotle ( BCE ) is the most notable product of the educational program devised by Plato. Aristotle wrote on an amazing range.
Alexander the Great ( BC). Alexander the Great was the king of Macedonia or Ancient Greece. He is consideredbe to one of the greatest military.
Introduction to the Foundations of Rhetoric AP Language and Composition.
The Art of Rhetoric Rhetoric: Aristotle defined rhetoric as the power of finding the available arguments suited to a given situation. Rhetoric helped people.
Aristotle’s PeRsuasive Audience appeals. ARISTOTLE In Rhetoric, Aristotle describes three main types of rhetoric: ethos, logos, and pathos. Rhetoric (n)
GREEK PHILOSOPHERS I can explain the importance of the Greek philosophers; Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s
The Delian League and Philosophers of Greece. Results of the Persian Wars Themistocles was praised as a war hero for Athens and credited with saving Greece.
Scientists By: Miguel Florez.
Rhetorical Appeals How are people persuaded?. Aristotle Student of Plato Became a teacher of Alexander the Great Worked with philosophy, politics, ethics,
Classical Athens. Athens was another important Greek city-state. The people of Athens wanted to rule themselves and not have a king or queen. Athens became.
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade Logos Ethos Pathos.
PRESENTATİON ABOUT ARİSTOTLE
The Three Means of Persuasion
“It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” –Aristotle Aristotle and Sense Perception Ms. Campbell Feb.
Rhetoric. Three Reasons for Writing 1.To Inform (Expository) 2.To Persuade (Persuasive) 3.Entertain (Narrative or Poetry)
The Art of Persuasion.
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion
Pathos, Ethos, Logos.
A Guide to Ethos, Pathos, and Logos
What is Rhetoric?.
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade
Rhetoric = The Art of Persuasion
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade
The Art of Persuasion Aristotle’s Eros, Pathos, and Logos
No-More Commercial.
Rhetorical Appeals.
Styles of argument Ethos, Pathos, and Logos.
Persuasion Rhetoric: The art of persuasion.

Introduction to Rhetoric
Aristotle’s Three Ways to Persuade
Presentation transcript:

Aristotle “The Naturalist”

Aristotle Born in 384. From the northwestern edge of the Greek Empire in Stagira. Father was physician to King Amyntas of Macedonia.

A Student of Plato Aristotle came to Athens to study under Plato from the age of 18 to 37. Eventually he classified the branches of knowledge into categories, including: physics, psychology, poetics, logic, and rhetoric.

Works Aristolte is said to have written twenty-seven dialogues on a level comparable to Plato´s and it is through these dialogues that he was best known in the ancient world. Unfortunately they were all destroyed when the Visigoths sacked Rome in 400 C.E. Some of his works were a collection of six logical treatises: Physics on Generation and Corruption, De Anima, On the Heavens, The History of Animals, On the Parts of Animals Metaphysics, Politics, Rhetoric, Poetics; and The Nichomachean Ethics.

Aristotle´s Life Aristotle probably learned basic anatomy and dissection from his father before he was sent to study in Plato´s Academy in Athens at the age of 18, when he arrived practically everyone noticed him, it was said by Plato that Aristotle pay more attention to his clothes than was proper for a philosopher, he immediately earned a reputation as one of the Academy´s finest students, he stayed with Plato 20 years. When Plato died, Aristotle was expected to be the next master of the Academy, but they picked a Native Athenian instead.

Tutor of Alexander the Great Around 340 B.C., when he was over 40, Aristotle returned to his home, Stagira, and he became tutor to the king’s son, the boy was wild and crude but he was able to smooth his rough edges and instill in him respect for knowledge, soon to become Alexander the Great. Alexander, through military campaigns, would later expand the empire of Greece to cover all of the Mideast reaching all the way to India.

The Lyceum Aristotle named his school after the god Apollo Lyceus. The Lyceum was built near some of the most elegant buildings in Athens. In addition to philosophy, Aristotles curriculum included tecnical lectures for limited audiences and popular lectures of more general interest. Aristotle collected hundreds of maps, charts and documents forming the first important library in the west. The Lyceum students tended to be from the middle class, whereas the students of the Academy were more aristocratic.

Not Forgotten over the Ages Through the ages Aristotle has remained established as one of the greatest philosophers ever, which is why the famous seventeenth century Dutch artist Rembrandt represented him gazing at a bust of the Greek poet Homer, author of The Odyssey. Four hundred years later, he isn’t forgotten, though we have a less sober way of appreciating historical leaders. Here we see him gazing at a more contemporary Homer.

A Definition for Rhetoric Rhetoric is, in essence, the art of persuasion, and Aristotle defined this art as "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion." In other words, it is the art of finding the best way to persuade a particular audience in a particular situation.

Aristotle’s Classical Appeals Aristotle identified three appeals that can be used to convince the audience. An appeal to ethos (to establish the speaker’s character and values). An appeal to pathos (to stir emotions). And an appeal to logos (to show the audience the logic and truth of the argument).

The Rhetorical Triangle When you engage in rhetoric, you are related to the audience and your subject. A well- balanced argument gives attention to all three points of the triangle, establishing your authority (ethos), drawing the audience emotionally (pathos), and doing justice to the facts (logos). However, if you give too much emphasis to facts, you can fall into a kind of distortion: making the subject seem cold and abstract. If you lean too much toward the audience, you can start to create propaganda. And if you put to much emphasis on your own character and values, you will seem egotistical. Subject Logos Possible Distortion: Abstraction Audience Pathos Possible Distortion: Propaganda Speaker Ethos Possible Distortion: Egotism