the ethics of public speaking and persuasion brian rogers chemical engineering 4903

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The Ethi cs of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

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Page 1: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

The Ethics of Public

Speaking and Persuasion

Brian Rogers

Chemical Engineering 4903

Page 2: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Overview

Ethics in Speaking

Persuasion

Arguing Effectively

Organization

Page 3: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Have ethical goals

Employ ethical means

The Ends and The Means

Page 4: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Ethical dilemmas

Professional obligations can createCircumstances can create

The Ends and The Means

Page 5: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

A conflict of responsibilities

A choice between “the lesser of two evils”

Professional Obligation

Page 6: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Situations dictate a change

Does the end justify the means?

Circumstances

Page 7: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Are your purposes consistent w/ prevailing norms?

Would you violate your own ethics by speaking out?

Are you willing to stick to your ethical principles?

What are the ethical standards?

Your Ethical Guidelines

Page 8: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Your basic ethical obligation

Tell the truthTake responsibility

Honesty & Accountability

Page 9: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

To avoid plagiarism

Give credit where it is due

Cite sources in the speech

Credit when you paraphrase

Honesty & Accountability

Page 10: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Tough penalties for “academic dishonesty”

In your career, you could lose your job and professional respect

The Costs of Plagiarism

Page 11: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Is not expected to be perfectly objective

Provides good arguments, sound reasoning and solid evidence

Remains open to new information

Is well informed and fully prepared

Contributes useful presentations

The Ethical Speaker

Page 12: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Deliberating in Good Faith

Tell the truth, as you see it

Back up your opinions

Accept your burden of proof

Page 13: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Questions of Fact, Value, and Policy

Page 14: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Involve existence, scope or causality

Questions about past / present

Predictions of the future

Require empirical proof: real examples, statistics, and expert testimony

Is That The Truth?

Issues of Fact

Page 15: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Involve what we consider good or bad, right or wrong

Focus on what we believe to be appropriate, legal, ethical or moral

Determine how we should evaluate facts, ideas or actions

Is This Good or Bad?

Issues of Value

Page 16: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Determine our future actions

Deal with how to solve problems

Evaluate options by costs, feasibility, advantages and disadvantages

What Are We Going To Do?

Issues of Policy

Page 17: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Ethical Proof in Persuasive Speaking

Page 18: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Ethos

The audience’s perception of the speaker’s credibility

Page 19: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Qualities of Positive Ethos

Trustworthiness

Competence

Open-Mindedness

Dynamism

Page 20: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Contextual Factors

Characteristics we admire may vary by situation

Some factors may be beyond our control

Context affects ethos positively or negatively

Page 21: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Ethos

Each time you speak, people form impressions of you

Page 22: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Strengthen Your Ethos

Share audience concerns

Cite reputable experts

Use personal experience

Be clear and interesting

Consider different points of view

Deliver with dynamism

Page 23: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Appealing to Audience Emotions

Page 24: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Appealing to Emotions

Fundamental to motivating an audience

Never a substitute for logical arguments and available evidence

Page 25: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Affective Language

Strong language that plays on emotions

Words must be chosen carefully

Page 26: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Identifying Shared Values

Show your audience that you share values

Show how your ideas relate to those values

Page 27: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Use Vivid Detail

Listeners respond to concrete examples better than abstractions

Speakers can reinforce ideas with vivid details

Page 28: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Use Visualization

Helps the audience to “see”

Stirs emotions

Gets audience to think more deeply

Help your audience visualize with a picture

Paint ‘word pictures’

Page 29: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Compare Unfamiliar to Familiar

Complicated and even controversial ideas can seem more familiar, and more acceptable

Page 30: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Ethical Considerations

Avoid deception and manipulation

Recognize and respect power of emotions

Avoid distraction and disorientation

Don’t overwhelm audience

Use emotional appeals to supplement and complement well-reasoned arguments

Page 31: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Constructing a Reasonable Argument

Page 32: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Debatable assertions by the speaker

Takes a side on a controversial matter and invites debate

Claims

Page 33: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Fact

Value

Policy

Claims

Page 34: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Words that indicate our level of confidence

Examples: “possibly”, “probably”, or “beyond any doubt”

Qualifiers

Page 35: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Qualified at a level appropriate to the strength of the reasoning and evidence behind it

A Reasonable Argument

Page 36: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Exceptions to our claim, or conditions under which we no longer hold the claim

“Unless”

Reservations

Page 37: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Use statistics, specific examples or expert testimony or other support

Consider the criteria or standards that support your evaluation

Reflect on the rules, principles or standard we employ in making judgments

Evidence

Page 38: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Quality

Relevancy

Amount

Tests of Evidence

Page 39: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

General assumptions that connect evidence to the claim

Some warrants may be accepted by audience, and may be unstated

If a warrant is controversial, it may require backing

Warrants

Page 40: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Advocates of new policies are expected to establish

Need for change

A specific plan

Proof the plan is workable

Burden of Proof

Page 41: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Construction of the Argument

Page 42: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903
Page 43: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

The Forms of Reasoning

Page 44: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Inductive ReasoningMoves from a set of specific examples to a general conclusion

A number of representative examples makes the case

Claims must carefully qualified

Reservations may be needed

Can be strengthened with evidence

Page 45: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Deductive Reasoning

Draws a conclusion about a specific case based on generally accepted premise

Syllogism is a classic example

Usually we reason from qualified premises to probable conclusions

Page 46: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Deductive Reasoning

Premises often already accepted by audience

Speaker may assume the audience will fill in the missing premise

This is “rhetorical syllogism” or enthymeme

Page 47: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Causal Reasoning

From effect to cause, or cause to effect

At the heart of scientific investigation

Rarely simple

Reputable sources are important

Qualified due to complexity

Page 48: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Analogical Reasoning

What is true in one case will be true in another

Literal analogy compares similar examples

Figurative analogy is similar to metaphor; rarely proves anything

Should be qualified

Page 49: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

How Patterns of Organization Connect Ideas

Page 50: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Chronological or Sequential

Good for step-by-step process or historical events

Begin with a specific point in time, move ahead or back from there

Page 51: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Spatial

Organizes according to space or physical relationship

Page 52: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Categorical

Arrange by distinct topics

Addresses

types

forms

qualities

aspects

Page 53: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Climactic

Simple to difficult, least to most, neutral to intense

Effective for gaining audience agreement or action

Can also reverse the pattern, from most to least

Page 54: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Cause & Effect

Moves from cause to effect, or effect to cause

Good to explain how an event unfolded

Chronology does not equal cause

Guard against over-simplification

Page 55: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Problem - Solution

Typically used in persuasive speaking

Speaker usually proposes a best solution

Page 56: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Problem - Solution

Reflective Thinking Sequence

Causes & extent of problem?

Effects of problem?

Criteria by which solutions should be judged?

Possible solutions (strengths & weaknesses)

Best solution?

Put into effect how?

Definition & limits of problems

Page 57: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Motivated Sequence

Five step pattern

Arouse

Dissatisfy

Gratify

Visualize

Move

Combines emotional and logical

Convince the audience they can effect change

Page 58: The Ethics of Public Speaking and Persuasion Brian Rogers Chemical Engineering 4903

Narrative Patterns

Use stories to illustrate or reinforce

Use spiraling narrative for drama / climax