Yes, it is recommended to use ethos, pathos, and logos in an editorial to establish credibility (ethos), appeal to emotions (pathos), and provide logical reasoning (logos). Combining all three elements can enhance the persuasiveness and effectiveness of the editorial's argument.
ethos
Ethos, Logos, and Pathos. (APEX)
They are called editorials. Or persuasive writing.
No its not logos its pathos
ethics, right and wrong, trust; a person will use an ethos argument to show that he is trustworthy and moral; ethos can also mean that he has done his research ...
They can influence an audience through the use of ethos, pathos, and logos.
Socrates creates an argument with Crito referring to what the people (who put him in jail) has told him about not being equally powerful and he cant destroy something that helped create him. He uses ethos, logos, and pathos in the forms of questions to create persuasiveness and helps persuade Crito into thinking like him.
No. Ethos is deduction and pathos is feelings.
The rhetorical triangle is all about 'logos', 'ethos' and 'pathos' (ancient greek). Ethos means that the writer or speaker must convince the audience that he is trustworthy, by presenting his/herself as well as possible. Pathos means that you must try to touch you audience, and appeal to their emotions. Logos means that you must use effective arguments with facts and supporting details and statistics. In a perfect speech you use all three of them. Try this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modes_of_persuasion
Ethos and Logos
Nelson Mandelas used the strategy of pathos in his speech during the Noble Peace ceremony.
There is no plural form of ethos. It is a literary device, part of the rhetorical triangle. Pathos, an appeal to the emotions, logos, an appeal to logic, and ethos, an appeal to credibility and ethics. When composing a paper, you would use the term in the style of the following sentence:"The author's lack of first person in this piece supports his ethos, as his account is illustrated as non-biased."