Defining Rhetoric
Five Canons of Rhetoric
Aristotle
Rhetoric (Misc.)
Modes of Persuasion
100

Classical rhetoric is

a combination of persuasion and argument, broken into three branches and five canons

100

What are the five canons of rhetoric?

invention, arrangement, style, delivery, memory

100

Aristotle is known as

"The father of Western Philosophy"

100

What branch of oratory is most commonly recognized as being used in present-day?

Judicial oratory-most commonly used in the law system 

100

Logos is...

An appeal to logic and reasoning.

It is persuading an audience with reason, using facts and figures

200

How does Aristotle define rhetoric?

the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion

200

Arrangement deal with

organizing the arguments for extreme effect; the structure of the text

200

Who was Aristotle a student of?

Plato

200

In classical rhetoric, oratory was divided into three branches, what are they?

Judicial oratory (or forensic), Deliberative oratory (or "legislative") and Epideictic oratory ("ceremonial" or "demonstrative"

200

Ethos is...

An appeal to ethics, using author credibility and authority. It establishes trust and appeals to your moral code

300

In comparison to Aristotle's understanding of rhetoric, what was Quintilian's?

"Rhetoric is the art of speaking well" or "...good man speaking well."

300

Why is it noted that rhetoric is concerned with judgement?

Aristotle says rhetoric is concerned with judgment because the audience judges the rhetor's ethos.

300

Aristotle's rhetoric focus on the rhetorical triangle, which is what?

the modes of persuasion; ethos, pathos, logos.

300

Epideictic oratory deals with..

is ceremonial discourse: speech or writing that praises or blames (someone or something).

300

Pathos is..

An appeal to emotion. It's a way of convincing an audience of an argument by creating an emotional response

400

In Aristotle's opinion, what is the relationship between dialectic and rhetoric

rhetoric is the counterpart (literally, the antistrophe of dialectic

400

Aristotle's five canons of rhetoric were developed as a means of presentation

False. The five canons of rhetoric were initially presented in Cicero's 'De Inventione' 

400

Aristotle wrote De Inventione

False

400

The enthymeme is..

the body of proof, as referred to by Aristotle

400

Aristotle's ethics suggest what?

that the orator has to arouse the emotions in order (i) to motivate the audience or (ii) to make them better persons

500

How does Cicero's definition of Rhetoric compare to Aristotle's? 

Cicero defined rhetoric as "speech designed to persuade, he saw rhetoric as the rules of the game, while Aristotle understood rhetoric to be the available means of persuasion; the tools being used to persuade. 

500

What are the three levels of style as defined by Quintilian? 

Plain style for instructing an audience.

Middle style for moving an audience.

Grand style for pleasing an audience

500

How many manuscripts, dialogue, books, (etc) written works did Aristotle publish?

Trick question, none. He wrote 200 works, but none of them were published by Aristotle. 

500

What is the overall goal of deliberative oratory?

The overall goal of deliberative oratory was to establish policies and pursue actions that contributed to the well-being of the citizenry 

500

How is persuasion accomplished by the character?

whenever the speech is held in a way to render the speaker worthy of credence. 

(If the speaker appears to be credible, the audience will form the second-order judgment that propositions put forward by the credible speaker are true or acceptable.)