Logos & The Syllogism
Logos & The Enthymeme
Deduction (Top-Down Reasoning)
Induction (Bottom-Up Reasoning)
Rhetoric
100

Another word for argumentation

What is persuasion?

100

What is an enthymeme?

a syllogism with one of the premises or the conclusion missing

100
Deductive reasoning starts with ______________ and applies them downward to ______________. 

Deductive reasoning starts with KNOWN PRINCIPLES and applies them downward to PARTICULARS/NEW PRINCIPLES. 

100

Inductive reasoning starts with _______________ and moves up into a ________________. 

Inductive reasoning starts with EXAMPLES/PARTICULARS and moves up into a GENERAL PRINCIPLE. 

100

Which of the two describe rhetoric:
a. people talking together about a topic (two-sided or more)

b. one person speaking to other people about a topic (one-sided)

What is b. one person speaking to other people about a topic (one-sided).

200

What is one of the three definitions of logos?

the reason that can be given form by words

an ordering of our own thinking through the patterned forms of thought that words make known

the argument itself

200

Identify the missing part

Man is mortal

Socrates is mortal

What is the minor premise?

200

What are the three forms of deductive reasoning?

Syllogism

Enthymeme

Maxim

200

What are the three forms of inductive reasoning?

Examples

Comparisons

Fables

200

What is one of the definitions of rhetoric?

The art of speaking well. 

The good man speaking well.

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

300

What is a syllogism?

an argument that uses two given propositions (premises) to logically prove a third proposition (the conclusion)

300

Why does Aristotle recommend using enthymemes in rhetoric as opposed to syllogisms? (2 virtues)

they are shorter and easier to follow

(if done well) they appeal to the principles or beliefs the audience already agrees to

300

What are the two approaches to using a maxim in an argument?

Agreeing with a maxim

Turning a maxim on its head (disagreeing with a maxim)

300

How does having more examples (a bigger sample size of observations) change the strength of your conclusion?

The larger the sample size (the more examples you have), the stronger your conclusion. 

300

Endoxa

What is common opinion, or common sense?

400

What are the three types of syllogisms/enthymemes we discussed?

Categorical

If/Then (hypothetical)

Disjunctive

400

What can people think if you use enthymemes poorly?

That you are hiding your argument, that you are wrong, that you are manipulating the situation
400

What is a maxim?

a general statement about practical conduct

an argument boiled down into one pithy saying

a wise saying passed down from previous ages or generations

400

Why can inductive reasoning never be 100% certain?

Someone can disprove your conclusion with just one example that contradicts your conclusion. 

400

The transcendentals

What are goodness, truth, and beauty?

500

How do you tell the difference between categorical, hypothetical, and disjunctive syllogisms?

categorical: all, no, some, some...not...

hypothetical: if...then...

disjunctive: either...or...

500

How do you make sure that the assumptions you make in a speech are "good" assumptions? (two criteria)

Based in reason

Believed by the audience

500

How does turning a maxim on its head help your ethos?

It shows that you are of even better character than common wisdom.

It shows that you are wise enough to question what most people think as "wise."

500

In the following deductive argument, which proposition is based on inductive reasoning?

All birds have wings.
Timmy is a bird.
Therefore, Timmy has wings. 

All birds have wings. 

We have found out that all birds have wings because of our observations of birds. So, we have discovered this GENERAL PRINCIPLE from EXAMPLES/OBSERVATIONS (inductive reasoning). 

500

What Aristotle thought about rhetoric

What is

He thought it was a neutral tool that could be used well and that could be abused too. 

Ethos is the most important appeal (the whole of the argument)

Pathos was easily manipulated.

Logos is his favorite.