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8y ago
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1mo ago

An appeal to the reader's sense of right and wrong is a moral appeal, which aims to persuade by appealing to ethical principles and values that the audience holds. This approach often involves invoking concepts of justice, fairness, and integrity to support the argument being made.

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Q: Which appeal is to the reader's sense of right and wrong?
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What is a moral appeal?

A moral appeal is a rhetorical strategy that aims to persuade by appealing to ethical principles, values, or beliefs. It seeks to evoke a sense of right and wrong in the audience to inspire action or support for a particular cause.


Can you show me an example of ethical appeal?

This are things that the community thinks or knows is right or wrong, for example: stealing is wrong.


Can you be forced to provide fingerprints?

if you did something wrong..then yeah the authorities have every right. If you haven't done anything wrong then no..you can appeal


Moral development is development of?

A sense of what is right and wrong :)


What does ethical appeal mean?

Ethical appeals relates to the Greek idea of Ethos. Arguments were to draw you in using Logos, Ethos, and Pathos- logic, ethics, emotions. The ethical appeal thus is a call to one's sense of morality and right and wrong. hey good job on puting this answer in


Why dont you guys have the right answer?

It depends on the answer. If it is an answer about what you are thinking or feeling, 9/10 we will get it wrong. We are not mind readers.


What is the knowledge of right from wrong called?

Common Sense or consience.


What implies a universal sense of right and wrong?

Natural Law


What is a consion?

A conscious is someone's moral sense of right or wrong.


Hume compares your sense of right and wrong to what?

Our sense of heat and color, which objects cause in us.


What did Hume compare our sense of right and wrong?

our sense of heat and color, which objects cause in us


Is 'does he has to read' right or wrong?

"Does he has to read" makes no sense. The sentence is "Does he have to read?"