How to use rhetoric to get what you want - Camille A. Langston

3,298,732 views ・ 2016-09-20

TED-Ed


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How do you get what you want using just your words?
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Aristotle set out to answer exactly that question over 2,000 years ago
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with the Treatise on Rhetoric.
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Rhetoric, according to Aristotle,
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is the art of seeing the available means of persuasion.
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And today we apply it to any form of communication.
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Aristotle focused on oration, though,
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and he described three types of persuasive speech.
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Forensic, or judicial, rhetoric
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establishes facts and judgements about the past,
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similar to detectives at a crime scene.
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Epideictic, or demonstrative, rhetoric
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makes a proclamation about the present situation,
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as in wedding speeches.
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But the way to accomplish change is through deliberative rhetoric,
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or symbouleutikon.
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Rather than the past or the present,
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deliberative rhetoric focuses on the future.
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It's the rhetoric of politicians
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debating a new law by imagining what effect it might have,
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like when Ronald Regan warned that the introduction of Medicare
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would lead to a socialist future spent telling our children
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and our children's children what it once was like in America when men were free.
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But it's also the rhetoric of activists urging change,
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such as Martin Luther King Jr's dream
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that his children will one day live in a nation
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where they will not be judged by the color of their skin,
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but by the content of their character.
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In both cases, the speaker's present their audience with a possible future
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and try to enlist their help in avoiding or achieving it.
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But what makes for good deliberative rhetoric,
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besides the future tense?
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According to Aristotle, there are three persuasive appeals:
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ethos,
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logos,
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and pathos.
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Ethos is how you convince an audience of your credibility.
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Winston Churchill began his 1941 address to the U.S. Congress by declaring,
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"I have been in full harmony all my life with the tides which have flowed
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on both sides of the Atlantic against privilege and monopoly,"
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thus highlighting his virtue as someone committed to democracy.
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Much earlier, in his defense of the poet Archias,
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Roman consul Cicero appealed to his own practical wisdom
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and expertise as a politician:
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"Drawn from my study of the liberal sciences
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and from that careful training to which I admit
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that at no part of my life I have ever been disinclined."
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And finally, you can demonstrate disinterest,
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or that you're not motivated by personal gain.
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Logos is the use of logic and reason.
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This method can employ rhetorical devices such as analogies,
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examples,
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and citations of research or statistics.
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But it's not just facts and figures.
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It's also the structure and content of the speech itself.
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The point is to use factual knowledge to convince the audience,
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as in Sojourner Truth's argument for women's rights:
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"I have as much muscle as any man and can do as much work as any man.
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I have plowed and reaped and husked and chopped and mowed
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and can any man do more than that?"
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Unfortunately, speakers can also manipulate people with false information
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that the audience thinks is true,
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such as the debunked but still widely believed claim
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that vaccines cause autism.
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And finally, pathos appeals to emotion,
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and in our age of mass media, it's often the most effective mode.
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Pathos is neither inherently good nor bad,
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but it may be irrational and unpredictable.
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It can just as easily rally people for peace
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as incite them to war.
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Most advertising,
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from beauty products that promise to relieve our physical insecurities
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to cars that make us feel powerful,
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relies on pathos.
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Aristotle's rhetorical appeals still remain powerful tools today,
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but deciding which of them to use
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is a matter of knowing your audience and purpose,
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as well as the right place and time.
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And perhaps just as important is being able to notice
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when these same methods of persuasion are being used on you.
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