Deliberative
Judicial
Epideictic
Stasis
Potpourri
100

Deliberative rhetoric is concerned with this timeframe

What is the future?

100

Judicial rhetoric is concerned with this timeframe.

What is the past?

100

Epideictic rhetoric is primarily concerned with this timeframe

What is the present?

100

This issue of stasis asks, "Did the action actually happen?"

What is fact?

100

This philosopher is the author of the foremost text on the three branches of rhetoric.

Who is Aristotle?

200

The primary goal of a deliberative speaker is this.

What is to consider the good?

200

The primary action in judicial rhetoric is this.

What is judge the true?

200

The primary action in epideictic rhetoric is this.

What is to praise the beautiful?

200

This issue of stasis asks if the act was justified or what its value was.

What is justice?

200

This is the term that represents laws that are assigned arbitrarily and may differ from community to community.

What is particular law?

300

This term refers to what Aristotle refers to as the ultimate good. 

What is happiness?

300

According to Aristotle, the reason a person commits a wrong is in pursuit of a good or apparent good or this.

What is pleasure or apparent pleasure?

300

This is the common name for epideictic rhetoric.

What is ceremonial rhetoric?

300

This issue of stasis asks if the wrong was harmful or advantageous. 

What is harm?
300

This term identifies the unwritten principles which are supposed to be acknowledges everywhere. 

What is universal law?

400

Deliberative speaking weighs whether an action is honorable versus this term, meaning "useful."

What is advantageous?

400

This specific branch of rhetoric is also frequently called by this name.

What is forensic?

400

Aristotle asserts that epideictic rhetoric is used to praise but is also used to do this.

What is accuse or dishonor the non-virtuous?

400

Arguing "I stole one cookie from you, but it doesn't really matter because you have the whole rest of the package still," uses this stasis.

What is importance?

400

These are possible qualities belonging to what person: they are not likely to be caught, they are weak, they have no enemies or lots of enemies, and they can see the benefit outweighing the consequence.

Who is the wrongdoer?

500

Aristotle says that we deliberate with only our happiness in mind. He defines happiness as the following: virtuous success, bodies and things, pleasure and security, and this.

Self-sufficiency

500

This is the name for regarding universal law above a particular law.

What is jurisprudence?

500
The 3 steps of epideictic rhetoric are to 1. Identify the virtues or values of a group or audience, 2. Name the sign posts of those virtues or values, and 3.

What is name the actions or deeds the subject of the praise shows or performs?

500

If a defendant claims they were not even at the scene of the crime, they are using this stasis.

 What is fact?

500
According to Aristotle there are seven reasons people do anything at all. They are

What are chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reasoning, anger, and appetite?

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