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What is Persuasion Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

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Page 1: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at
Page 2: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

What is Persuasion Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs,

values, and behaviors.○ Increases understanding and awareness but at same time seeks to influence

audience choices.

Characteristics of Persuasion Not Coercive although you need to take a stance Topics always have 2 alternative viewpoints Subjective/Often one sided Incremental-persuasion is a process-happens over time Interactive Key is change Can be ethical

Page 3: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Two Components of Persuasion Convincing-changing the way audience

members think

Actuating-changing or moving audience members toward a specific behavior

Page 4: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Succeeding in Persuasion

Relevant message

Establish common ground with listener

Listeners should feel that changing will benefit them

Seek minor change-more successful than seeking major change

More likely to persuade people if speaker’s position is only moderately different from audiences

Recognize that decision is ultimately audiences

Page 5: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Classical Persuasive Appeals

Vs.

Contemporary Persuasive Appeals

Page 6: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Classical Persuasive Appeals

Aristotle believed persuasion could be brought about through use of 3 means - forms of rhetorical proofs

1-Logos2-Pathos3-Ethos

Page 7: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Logos Has to do with actual nature of message-the

logic and reasoning used to build argument

The appeal to audience’s reason and logic

Builds arguments for or against an idea

through two main types of appeals… 1. Syllogism

2. Enthymeme

Page 8: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Logos Cont..

1. Syllogism

-three part argument that consists of 1. a major premise (general case)

2. a minor premise or (specific case), and

3. a conclusion.

Page 9: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

• Syllogism - form of deductive reasoning • Moves from general condition to specific instance• Absolute and Constant

– Ex. *Major Premise: All men are mortal *Minor Premise: Socrates is a man *Conclusion: Therefore Socrates is a mortal

*Syllogism can sometimes make overgeneralizations-attempt to support a claim by asserting that a particular piece of evidence is true for everyone concerned.

 

Page 10: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Logos Cont.

2. Enthymeme

-A syllogism presented as probability rather than as an absolute

-One premise is always missing in an argument but is implied

-Useful because arguments are rarely based on absolutes

Page 11: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Pathos• Has to do with audience’s feelings

• Appeal to audience emotion-requires creating a certain outlook in audience, painting image

• Aristotle thought there are 4 sets of emotions that you can appeal to-

-anger and meekness-love and hate-fear and boldness-shame and shamelessness

• 2 general ways of invoking pathos: -vivid description -emotionally charged words.

• Relying solely on pathos in an argument will fail-must be combined with sound reasoning.

Page 12: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Ethos Has to do with qualifications and personality of

speaker

The appeal through the nature of the speaker’s moral character and personality which consists of three elements:

Good sense or competence Moral character Goodwill

Page 13: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Contemporary Persuasive Appeals

Aside from classical approaches, there are also contemporary ways of appealing and persuading

A-Persuading Listeners By Appealing To Their Needs

B-Persuading Listeners By Appealing To The Reasons For Their Behavior

C-Persuading Listeners By Focusing On What’s Most Relevant To Them

D-Persuading Listeners Through Speaker Credibility

Page 14: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

A. Persuading Listeners By Appealing To Their Needs

Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs -contemporary form of motivation

States that each person has 5 basic needs hierarchically embedded. Physiological Safety Social Self-Esteem Self-Actualization

Lower level needs must be met before higher level

Page 15: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

B-Persuading Listeners By Appealing To The Reasons For Their Behavior

Expectancy-Outcome Values Theory

-Consciously evaluating the potential costs and benefits associated with taking a particular

action

Page 16: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

C-Persuading Listeners By Focusing On What’s Most Relevant To Them

Elaboration Likelihood Model - theory of persuasion that suggests that people process persuasive messages by one of 2 routes, depending on their degree of involvement in message

1. Central Processing- People who are motivated and able to think critically about a message are said to engage in this

2. Peripheral Processing-People who see the message as irrelevant or too complex and thus don’t pay close attention are said to engage in this

Page 17: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

D-Persuading Listeners Through Speaker Credibility

Audience’s perceptions and attitudes toward the speakers’ perceived expertise, trustworthiness, similarity to audience members and attractiveness.

Page 18: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EP2fBWrH46M

Page 19: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

PERSUASION INVOLVES USING REASONING AND ARGUMENT

Page 20: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

What is Reasoning?

1- “The power of comprehending, inferring, or thinking in orderly rational ways.”

2- “The process of building arguments created to change people’s opinions, influence behavior, or justify the arguer’s beliefs or actions.”

Page 21: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

What is an argument?

Page 22: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Argument

Argument: stated position with support for or against an idea; consists of proposition and evidence

Persuasive speeches use arguments to present one alternative as superior to other.

Core elements of argument & persuasion consist of proposition and evidence

Page 23: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

3 parts to an argumentCore elements of an argument….

• Proposition/Claim-the conclusion the speaker is attempting to prove. or proposition being made-Thesis statement.

• Evidence-material that provides grounds for belief. Examples, narratives, testimony, facts, and statistics

• Warrant-links claim and evidence together. Provides reasons that evidence supports the claim.

Page 24: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Proposition (Part 1)

There are 3 types of propositions1. Proposition of fact

2. Proposition of value

3. Proposition of policy

Page 25: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Propositions- different types of propositions require different kinds of supporting evidence.

Propositions of Facts

Focus on conditions that exist, once existed, or will exist in the future.

whether something is true of falseWhether something will or will not happenRequire often factual evidence

Page 26: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Propositions of Value

Deals with issues of judgment Why something is right/wrong, good/badNot attempting to prove truthRequire evidence but more subjective rather than

factual

 

Page 27: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

• Propositions of Policy

– Recommend that specific course of action be taken, or approved of by audience.

– Proposes that certain outcome will be realized if the proposed condition is met

• Ex-Property taxes should be increased to fund classroom expansions at local elementary schools

Page 28: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Evidence (Part 2)

• What speaker’s use to persuade audience to believe their claims-supporting material

• External evidence-any information in support of claim that comes from sources aside from speaker (examples, narratives, testimony, facts, statistics)

• Audience’s knowledge, expertise and opinions can be evidence-will only work if audience believes speaker has credibility

Page 29: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Warrants (Part 3)

Help support a claim and substantiate in the audience’s mind link between claim and evidence

There are 3 different types of warrants-or reasoning that speakers can use in arguments

Page 30: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Organizing the Persuasive Speech

Page 31: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Problem-Solution Pattern

• Most common format in persuasion

• Usually for propositions of fact and propositions of policy

• This pattern organizes speech points using following format

• A) Problem-Define it• B) Solution-Offer ways to overcome problem

Page 32: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Problem-Solution cont…

Example- Speech Purpose-Arguing for a reduction in the price of gasoline (Proposition of ?)

Problem-How high gasoline prices present a problem

Solution-Way or ways in which prices can be lowered

Page 33: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Monroe’s Motivated Sequence Pattern of Arrangement

• Uses problem-solution format

• Five step process that begins with arousing listeners’ attention and ends with calling for action

• Effective when you want audience to do something-ex. buy a product, donate time, donate money

• Also effective when you want audience to reconsider present way of thinking about something

Page 34: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Step 1

Attention – Gain audience’s attention– Arouse curiosity about what speaker is

going to say – Makes speech highly relevant to audience

Page 35: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Step 2Need critical step Isolate and describe issue to be addressed Identify unfulfilled needs-needs that audience

members have that must be satisfied - problem that must be solved

Establish clear, urgent, and unfulfilled need in the mind of audience

No solutions should be proposed

Page 36: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Step 3

Satisfaction Propose solution that satisfies the needs of

audience -solution to problem Offer proposal to change attitudes, beliefs,

and values regarding problem Identify and eliminate possible objections to

this solution.

Page 37: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Step 4

Visualization Visualize resulting satisfaction and anticipated

outcomes Intensify audience’s desire for solution by

getting them to visualize what their lives will be like once they’ve adopted it

Use vivid images and verbal illustrations to support benefits of proposed solution.

Page 38: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Step 5

 Action• Define specific actions-make direct

request to audience• Turn audience’s agreement and

commitment into positive action• Tell audience what they need to do to

obtain described solutions and its benefits

Page 39: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Comparative Advantage Pattern Speaker viewpoints or proposal shown as

superior to opposing viewpoint or proposal- --Comparing/Contrasting

effective when audience already aware of issue or problem and agrees that need for a solution exists

used in claims of value speeches

Page 40: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Refutation Pattern of Arrangement Each main point addresses and then

refutes (disproves) an opposing claim to speaker’s position

Idea here is to bolster your own position by disproving the opposing claim

Effective if you are confident that the opposing argument is weak and vulnerable to attach

Page 41: What is Persuasion  Persuasion-process of influencing ones attitudes, beliefs, values, and behaviors. ○ Increases understanding and awareness but at

Addressing the other side of the argument

• All attempts at persuasion are subject to counter-persuasion.

• Inoculation Effect-speaker can induce resistance to counterclaims by acknowledging them. • By anticipating counter-arguments and then

addressing or rebutting them, you can help listeners ignore other viewpoints.