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Persuasion, Propaganda, and Logical Fallacies

Persuasion, Propaganda, and Logical Fallacies. 1. Propaganda and Persuasion. PERSUASION is an attempt to convince your audience to agree with you. PROPAGANDA is the application of particular techniques, tricks, and manipulations used to persuade an audience.

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Persuasion, Propaganda, and Logical Fallacies

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  1. Persuasion, Propaganda, and Logical Fallacies

  2. 1. Propaganda and Persuasion • PERSUASION is an attempt to convince your audience to agree with you. • PROPAGANDA is the application of particular techniques, tricks, and manipulations used to persuade an audience.

  3. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:2. NAME CALLING • Giving an idea or person a bad label, thereby condemning it without actual evidence • Examples: extremist, liberal, right wing, dirty hippie, maniac

  4. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:3. LOADED TERMS • Associating something with a word with a strong connotation, thereby making the audience like or dislike something without evidence to support it • Examples: “freedom,” “war,” “peace,” “justice,” “strength,” “perfection,” “oppression”

  5. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:4. TESTIMONIAL • Having a famous or well-liked person promote you • Examples: any time celebrities are in commercials to promote a product, or when celebrities speak in favor of a political candidate

  6. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:5. CARD STACKING • Using selective facts that only show one side of the story • Example: when politicians’ ads tell only the bad things their opponent has done; when movie ads use only the good parts of the critics’ comments

  7. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:6. BAND WAGON • Convince the audience that “everyone is doing it” and you will be left out if you don’t • Example: a commercial for alcohol that shows a huge group of young, “cool” people at a party all drinking that beverage; when a movie promotion says how many people have gone to see it already

  8. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:7. EMOTIONAL APPEAL • Playing on people’s fears, guilt, anger, pride, etc. in order to influence them • Example: “Choosy moms choose Jiff.”

  9. Types of Persuasion/Propaganda:8. SEX APPEAL • Making it seem like you will be more attractive if you do what they want • Example: The Axe body spray commercials in which the dorky guy uses Axe, and suddenly beautiful women surround him

  10. 9. LOGICAL FALLACIES • LOGICAL FALLACIES are tactics used to argue a point that are not logically sound.

  11. Types of Logical Fallacies:10. HASTY GENERALIZATION • A forced stereotype not drawn from enough evidence or from inaccurate evidence • Example: That teenager from Thomasville got arrested; therefore, teenagers from Thomasville are criminals and should not be trusted.

  12. Types of Logical Fallacies:11. CIRCULAR REASONING • Trying to make your point by simply stating it in a different way, rather than giving actual evidence • Example: High school students should not be allowed to park in the lot currently reserved for faculty because that parking lot should be for faculty only.

  13. Types of Logical Fallacies:12. LEADING QUESTIONS • Posing a question to make your point that forces the audience to answer one way • Example: Is it a good idea to poison water that children drink? If you say no, then you must vote for David Breyer!

  14. Types of Logical Fallacies:13. FALSE ASSUMPTION • Arriving at a conclusion or assumption that you do not have enough evidence to support • Example: Bill Fenders was not elected for a second term in office, so obviously he was a terrible leader.

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