who would agree with something that is of no benefit to them, or that causes them pain? — Pop
Self interest is key — Pop
I think that "or" should be an "and". — dussias
What do you mean by "self-interest?" — dussias
Making someone say to itself:
This is important and will help me survive.
is the expressway into agreement and engagement. — dussias
making the other learn something.
Making someone say to itself:
This is important and will help me survive.
is the expressway into agreement and engagement.
What do you think? — dussias
Of benefit to them, and not harm them. — Pop
You can’t make someone else learn something if they don’t want to, or if it takes too much effort. — Possibility
being demonstrably well-informed — Pantagruel
convincing a person who committed a very bad crime to turn themselves in. — Sherry
what is good for us, in a self-interested kind of way. The best way to persuade someone is to appeal to their self-interest, creating the illusion that there is something on it — Alejandro
Rhetoric is an embellishment, a decorative touch, added to written/spoken words in order to evoke a positive response by virtue of its aesthetic qualities. While the value of rhetoric can't be underestimated in debate, one should also be wary of its power of "empty persuasion" and by that I mean rhetoric can move hearts and change minds even when there's no real substance to what is being said or written. — TheMadFool
being demonstrably well-informed
— Pantagruel
What about "fake news"? We're actively questioning sources whose purpose is akin to being well-informed. — dussias
making the other learn something.
Making someone say to itself:
This is important and will help me survive.
is the expressway into agreement and engagement.
What do you think? — dussias
You can’t make someone else learn something if they don’t want to, or if it takes too much effort.
— Possibility
How did you learn about E=mc² ?
Did you read about it in a book? Or do people just go around repeating it? You most likely know the basics of what it means, but you do not question whether it is important. You just accept it. — dussias
Being able to repeat the formula does not mean you’ve learnt anything about it — Possibility
Persuasion is not based in learning, — Metaphysician Undercover
Being well-informed implies being aware of the quality of your information sources. — Pantagruel
Understood. Let's not say rhetoric. Thank you, you taught me something! — dussias
False or erronous learning is still a type of learning, and I mean to include that. — dussias
And why is that what we ought do? — Banno
You connect rather than coming at them as some Newtonian impact — Coben
Inductive arguments are by definition probabilistic — TheMadFool
doubt is an irremovable feature of all claims to knowledge.
In short, no argument ever guarantees the truth of its conclusion in a manner that is satisfactory. — TheMadFool
You have presented an argument as to what constitutes good rhetoric. As I said arguments don't work — TheMadFool
You have to win hearts not strike fear — TheMadFool
Is it? Can you qualify that? Because as just that general statement I would have to disagree vigorously. — Pantagruel
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