Catégories : Tous - needs - evidence - examples - values

par Mikayla LoBasso Il y a 6 années

109

Evidence

To persuade an audience effectively, one must use various forms of evidence such as factual data, statistics, comparative statistics, examples, expert opinions, and images. Factual evidence is generally accepted by the public, while statistics provide numerical insights and comparative statistics help put information in context.

Evidence

Backing up a Claim

Appeals to Needs and Values: when evidence is not enough the appeal to needs and values comes into play.

Effective Appeals to Values (Pg. 202).
You have to read an aduience in order to appeal to their values. What do they like? What do they care about? (Pg. 203).
values are different for everyone depending on age, sex, race, religion, culture ect. (Pg 203).
Subtopic
The last three of Maslow's classifications are the hardest to appeal to due to them needing human connection (Pg. 201).
make people feel safe from harm. Politicians often do this (Pg 201).
Maslow's needs classification (Pg. 201)
self actualization: realizing ones potential

esteem needs: material success and recognition from others

social needs: love within a family and among friends

safety needs: security and freedom from arm

physiological needs: basic bodily requirements (food, drink, health, sex)

evidence: what you use to convince the audience to see the subject the same way you do (Pg 175).

factual evidence: possessing a high degree of public acceptance (facts) (Pg. 175).
images (photos can say more than words. they are especially useful when it comes to scientific evidence) (Pg. 179).
expert opinion (the opinions experts formulate based on research they did. It is how they interpret data) (Pg. 178).
statistic (these express information in numbers) (Pg. 177).

comparative statistic: helps put information into perspective and prove the authors point (Pg. 177).

examples (these help enliven a topic) (Pg. 176).