Friday, December 5, 2014
Response to Hooked on a Myth
My Op-Ed
Op-Ed How to make it easier for health workers to volunteer in crises
Life as a student athlete.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
View on this unit
I hope all of you got as much out of this unit as I did and are happy with the results an progress you are making to both your regular work and writing pieces.
D-I-N-O-S-A-U-R
Empathy
We tend to think of empathy as a uniquely human trait. With empathy being an attribute we exclusively thought to humans, you'd think that we'd empathize with each other before we did with any other species. This however is not true.
Last year there was a study done involving 240 men and women, most between the ages of 18 and 25 years old. Each participant was given a fictional news story involving the beating of a 1-year old baby, an adult in his 30's, a puppy or a 6-year old dog. After reading the story the participant was to rate how much empathy they had for the victim of the attack.
More empathy was shown for the child, the puppy and the adult dog than the adult human. Surprisingly, the study showed that the same amount of empathy was shown for the baby as the puppy.
Why? Why is it that more empathy was shown for an animal than for someone of our own species?
After giving this some thought I came to the conclusion that because the puppy and baby are helpless and unable to defend themselves, they derive more empathy from us than an adult who has is bigger, stronger and therefore more capable of defending himself.
I'm not sure how I feel about this study. I feel like a part of me agrees with the results. That the amount of empathy I feel would also be greater for the baby and puppy than for the human adult. The other part of me is mostly confused and I can't quite figure out what it is I'm confused about.
Empathy, weather it's a human trait just a human trait or not, is something that I think should be universal and should not be limited to race, religion, or species.
My Op-Ed Article
My Experience with the Unit
Frustration towards my op-Ed topic
Empathy & Belonging
Op-Ed on Technology
Ethos, Pathos, Logos
Emotion is the force that will make people make a change, as John Edlund wrote in his article "Three Ways to Persuade" he says "logical arguments for banning or not banning assault rifles had not changed at all, but people were emotionally engaged with the issue after [the] event and wanted to do something". Emotion brings more change than anyone's image or logic would.
A writers character/credibility is the first thing that a reader looks for in a piece of writing, it's like the first step on stairs. If I were reading a article about the universe and it was talking about aliens and things like that, and if it was coming from some regular citizen, I wouldn't want to read it because it's most likely not credible. I rather read the article from an astronomer, someone who's an expert in the field. That's just the way things go.
Appealing to logic is another to get your point across in an argument, for the sole reason that it's reasonable. Nine times out of ten if an argument sounds reasonable, you're going to listen in on it more because it sounds right, it doesn't necessarily mean that it is right though. It just makes sense.
For a solid argument, at least one of these three rhetorical strategies should be used to build a more solid argument. We all know how essential these elements are to an argument because we have seen these appeals used correctly and incorrectly, they're needed to persuade.