hum-rhetoric

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Apply classical rhetoric — Ethos, Pathos, Logos — to analyze persuasive communication and craft effective arguments. Use this skill when the user needs to make a speech more persuasive, analyze why a piece of communication is effective, write a compelling proposal, or evaluate rhetorical strategies — even if they say 'make this more convincing', 'why is this speech so powerful', or 'how do I persuade the board'.

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npx skill4agent add asgard-ai-platform/skills hum-rhetoric

Rhetoric: The Art of Persuasion

Overview

Aristotle identified three modes of persuasion: Ethos (credibility), Pathos (emotion), and Logos (logic). Effective persuasion uses all three in proportion appropriate to the audience and context.

Framework

IRON LAW: All Three Appeals, Calibrated to Audience

Logos alone convinces analysts but bores executives. Pathos alone moves
hearts but lacks substance. Ethos alone relies on reputation that may
not exist.

Every persuasive communication must use all three, weighted by audience:
- Technical audience: Lead with Logos, support with Ethos
- Executive audience: Lead with Pathos (vision), support with Logos (data)
- Public audience: Lead with Ethos (trust), amplify with Pathos

The Three Appeals

Ethos (Credibility) — Why should they trust YOU?
  • Expertise, credentials, track record, shared values
  • Established early — if the audience doesn't trust you, nothing else matters
  • Techniques: cite credentials, reference shared experience, acknowledge limitations honestly
Pathos (Emotion) — Why should they CARE?
  • Stories, vivid language, shared values, urgency, aspiration, fear
  • Creates motivation to act — logic alone rarely moves people
  • Techniques: personal anecdotes, concrete examples, sensory language, rhetorical questions
Logos (Logic) — Why should they BELIEVE?
  • Data, evidence, logical reasoning, structure
  • Provides the rational justification for the emotional response
  • Techniques: statistics, case studies, cause-and-effect, comparison, analogy

Rhetorical Devices

DeviceWhat It DoesExample
AnaphoraRepeating the opening phrase"We will fight... We will never surrender... We will..."
TricolonGroup of three"Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"
AntithesisJuxtaposing opposites"Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country"
Rhetorical questionQuestion with an obvious answer"Can we really afford to wait?"
Metaphor/AnalogyComparing abstract to concrete"This project is our moonshot"
ChiasmusReversed parallel structure"We don't stop when we're tired; we stop when we're done"

Analysis Steps (for evaluating rhetoric)

  1. Identify the rhetorical situation: Speaker, audience, purpose, context
  2. Map the appeals: Where does the text use Ethos, Pathos, Logos?
  3. Identify devices: Which rhetorical techniques amplify the message?
  4. Assess effectiveness: Does the appeal balance match the audience? Are the appeals authentic?
  5. Note weaknesses: Where is the rhetoric thin, manipulative, or mismatched?

Output Format

markdown
# Rhetorical Analysis: {Text/Speech}

## Rhetorical Situation
- Speaker: ...
- Audience: ...
- Purpose: ...
- Context: ...

## Appeal Analysis
| Section | Appeal | Technique | Effectiveness |
|---------|--------|-----------|--------------|
| {quote/section} | Ethos/Pathos/Logos | {specific technique} | H/M/L |

## Overall Balance
- Ethos: {strong/weak} — {evidence}
- Pathos: {strong/weak} — {evidence}
- Logos: {strong/weak} — {evidence}

## Verdict
{Overall effectiveness and recommendations for improvement}

Examples

Correct Application

Scenario: Analyzing a startup pitch
  • Ethos (slide 2): "Our team has 15 years combined experience at Google and Meta" — establishes technical credibility ✓
  • Pathos (slide 1): "Imagine waiting 3 weeks for a doctor's appointment while your child has a fever" — creates urgency through a relatable scenario ✓
  • Logos (slide 5): "TAM of $4.2B growing at 18% CAGR (McKinsey, 2024)" — data-backed market opportunity ✓
  • Balance: Well-calibrated for investor audience (Pathos hook → Ethos team → Logos market)

Incorrect Application

  • A pitch deck with 20 slides of data and no story or emotional hook → All Logos, no Pathos. Investors decide emotionally first, then justify rationally. Violates Iron Law: all three appeals needed.

Gotchas

  • Ethos is fragile: One dishonest claim destroys all credibility. Never overstate credentials or data.
  • Pathos without Logos is manipulation: Pure emotional appeal without evidence is demagoguery. Always provide logical backing.
  • Know your audience's Ethos threshold: In Taiwan, academic titles and institutional affiliations carry strong Ethos. In Silicon Valley, startup exits and portfolio companies matter more. Calibrate.
  • Written vs spoken: Written rhetoric relies more on Logos (readers can re-read and verify). Spoken rhetoric relies more on Pathos and Ethos (listeners process in real-time).
  • Counter-rhetoric: Understanding rhetoric helps you RESIST manipulation too. When someone appeals purely to emotion with no evidence, recognize it.

References

  • For speech structure templates, see
    references/speech-structures.md