Difference between revisions of "Rhetorical deception"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (slight smw category change)
(→‎Related Articles: valid uses)
 
Line 13: Line 13:
  
 
Rhetorical deceptions are heavily used in [[advertising]], both commercial and political.
 
Rhetorical deceptions are heavily used in [[advertising]], both commercial and political.
==Related Articles==
+
==Related==
 +
* There are some {{l/sub|valid uses}} for [[rhetorical deception]], but only as a supplement.
 
* The [[:category:rhetorical deceptions|rhetorical deceptions category]] is a catalogue of pages about specific types of [[rhetorical deception]].
 
* The [[:category:rhetorical deceptions|rhetorical deceptions category]] is a catalogue of pages about specific types of [[rhetorical deception]].
 
* [[Logical fallacies]] are frequently used as [[rhetorical deception]]s.
 
* [[Logical fallacies]] are frequently used as [[rhetorical deception]]s.
 +
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
===Reference===
 
===Reference===

Latest revision as of 11:24, 12 December 2016

Dark Arts portal

About

A rhetorical deception is any particular technique used in speech or writing to persuade someone of an opinion based on unsound reasoning, i.e. to promote false beliefs. (LessWrong refers to these uses as "the dark arts".)

Rhetorical deceptions typically play on people's innate cognitive biases (see: List of cognitive biases).

Rhetorical deceptions are heavily used in advertising, both commercial and political.

Related

Links

Reference

standard

additional

Humor