Informative, Persuasive and Argumentative Communication: PC - 1st - Sem - NQA
Informative, Persuasive and Argumentative Communication: PC - 1st - Sem - NQA
Module 7
Overview
Communication is made for numerous purposes. The way messages are crafted
depends highly on the intention of the sender. It also emphasized as it serves its purpose to
inform, evoke, entertain, argue and persuade.
Osborn (2009) purports that informative communication arises out of three deep
impulses:
When preparing for an informative exchange, ask yourself the following questions:
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through time. According to Aristotle, logos, ethos and pathos are the three primary forms of
proof. In our time, whoever, many scholars have confirmed the presence of a fourth
dimension of proof, mythos, which suggests that we respond to appeals to the traditions and
values of our culture and to the legends and folktales that embody them.
Lucas (2007) claims that to avoid defective argumentation, the following must be
avoided:
1. Defective evidence
Misuse of facts
Statistical fallacies
Defective testimony
Inappropriate evidence
2. Defective pattern of reasoning
Evidential fallacies
a. Slippery slope
b. Confused facts with opinion
c. Red herring
d. Myth of the mean
Flawed proofs
Defective arguments
CHECK and DO
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