Response 6

Glossary

Icon: Any image used to represent a person, place, thing, or idea

Ex: “ The United States use its flag to represent concepts, ideas and philosophies.”

Source: McCloud, Scott. _The Vocabulary of Comics_ (Understanding Comics, Ch (1). 2).pdf, https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=38429597

Pathos: Argument by emotion.

Ex: “The AD on tv showed 3rd world children suffering to get donations for charity”

Source: Heinrich, Soften Them Up.pdf, https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=39845751

Ethos: Argument by character.

Ex: “The physician attended medical school and has years of medical experience, which create a sense of security for patients.

Source: Heinrich, Soften Them Up.pdf, https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=39845751

Premise: a previous statement or proposition from which another is inferred or follows as a conclusion 

     Ex: The game was won on the premise the star player made the shot before time expired on             

            the clock.

Source:  Heinrich, Control The Argument.pdf

https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=39845817

Enthymeme: a logic sandwich that slaps a common place and a conclusion together. Enthymeme means “something in the mind.” It uses a commonplace something in the audience’s mind to support a choice” 

Ex: “All insects have six legs; therefore, all wasps have six legs” the minor premise all Wasps are insects

Source: Heinrich, Control The Argument.pdf

https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=39845817

Chiasmus: a figure of speech by which the order of the words in the first of two parallel clauses is reversed in the second

Ex: He saved others; himself he cannot save.

Source: Heinrichs’s Open Your Eyes.pdf                 https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=39845785

Decorum– the art of fitting in — not just in polite company but everywhere, from the office to the neighborhood bar

Ex: He has a strong sense of decorum, his company is enjoyable everywhere he goes.

Fallacies: a deceptive or misleading argument 

     Ex: “Blue is a bad color because it is linked 

     with sadness”

Source: Heinrichs_Spot Fallacies.pdf

https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=40258419

Hasty Generalization: an offspring of misinterpreting the evidence which can reach vast conclusions with scanty data

Ex: My ex girlfriend cheated on me, all girls are awful!

Source:  Heinrichs_Spot Fallacies.pdf

https://gatech.instructure.com/courses/307054/files?preview=40258419

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