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citation: Thank you for Arguing

Heinrichs, Jay. Thank You for Arguing: What Aristotle, Lincoln, and Homer Simpson Can Teach Us about the Art of Persuasion. Broadway Books, 2020.

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2023-02-18 - to gain trust in making a decision

2023-02-18 - craft and competence

2023-02-12 - the reluctant conclusion

2023-02-12 - more disinterest

2023-02-03 - TYFA Chapter Two Summary

2023-01-14 - exploring expectations

2022-12-21 - TYFA Chapter One Summary

2022-12-15 - appear to sacrifice for an inevitable choice

2022-12-15 - changing position

2022-12-12 - character references

2022-12-12 - Aristotle’s 3 essential qualities of persuasive ethos

2022-12-12 - this-not-that figure

2022-12-12 - aporia

2022-08-18 - decorum, expectations, and ethos

2022-08-18 - the mood of the audience (pathos)

2022-08-18 - ethos, logos, and pathos

2022-08-17 - Aristotle’s (three most powerful) tools of persuasion

2022-08-17 - debating the undebatable

2022-08-17 - deliberative argument

2022-08-17 - core issues of argument

2022-08-17 - goals for an argument

2022-08-17 - definition: concession

2022-08-17 - quote of argument vs fight

2022-08-17 - disputes for arguing or attacking

2022-03-25 - an atom of rhetoric regarding straight shooters

2022-03-22 - definition: Persuasive use of order

2022-03-22 - an atom on providing choices

2022-03-22 - definition: argumentum a fortiori

2022-03-22 - definition: Dirimens copulatio

2022-03-22 - Cicero’s Five-Step method for constructing a speech

2022-03-22 - definition: Enthymeme

updated: 2022-11-05 01:39:06

generated: 2024-05-25