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.
to persuade
To help persuade your audience that you are correct
Ethos, pathos, and logos refer to different approaches for persuading someone with an argument. Ethos appeals to ethics, pathos appeals to emotion, and logos appeals to logic.
To help persuade your audience that you are correct
Anticipation
Pathos
he didn't
appeals to their emotions.
Susan Anthony's argument uses pathos-based arguments because of the use of numerous rhetorical devices including distinction.
Pathos ---> Apex
pathos
Logos and pathos
The components of a rhetorical argument typically include the introduction (exordium), statement of facts (narratio), division of arguments (partitio), proof (confirmatio), refutation (refutatio), and conclusion (peroratio). These components help structure and strengthen the argument by appealing to logic, emotion, and credibility.
to persuade
Susan Anthony's argument uses pathos-based arguments because of the use of numerous rhetorical devices including distinction.
An argument that appeals to the listener, using logic, emotion, or trust
To help persuade your audience that you are correct