Difference between revisions of "Appeal to emotion"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
<hide>
 
<hide>
 
[[page type::article]]
 
[[page type::article]]
[[thing type::rhetorical deception]]
+
[[thing type::manipulative tool]]
 
[[category:rhetorical deceptions]]
 
[[category:rhetorical deceptions]]
 
</hide>
 
</hide>
 
==About==
 
==About==
An [[appeal to emotion]] or "argument from emotion" is a form of [[rhetorical deception]] commonly found in company with one or more [[logical fallacies]] which it is working to conceal. It consists of any kind of argument which works more by triggering particular ''feelings'' ("pressing emotional buttons") than by [[address the content|conveying actual ''substance'']] relevant to the subject under discussion.
+
An [[appeal to emotion]] or "argument from emotion" is a [[manipulative tool]] commonly found in company with one or more [[logical fallacies]] which it is working to conceal. It consists of any kind of argument which works more by triggering particular ''feelings'' ("pressing emotional buttons") than by [[address the content|conveying actual ''substance'']] relevant to the subject under discussion.
 
==Types==
 
==Types==
 
The two major types of emotional appeal are:
 
The two major types of emotional appeal are:

Revision as of 00:01, 12 August 2020

About

An appeal to emotion or "argument from emotion" is a manipulative tool commonly found in company with one or more logical fallacies which it is working to conceal. It consists of any kind of argument which works more by triggering particular feelings ("pressing emotional buttons") than by conveying actual substance relevant to the subject under discussion.

Types

The two major types of emotional appeal are:

Other types include

Links

Reference

News