Rhetorical techniques

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    The explorer conditioning technique (ECT): Treat a new task as a quest for new discoveries. To be able to perform at your peak, you have to love what you are doing. Whether it’s acting, bartending or washing dishes, you have to learn to love what you do. One way to achieve this is to technically act like any explorer would, which is to be thrilled by something new every day (or treat everything as such even when it’s not new). It should be as if each task you were making were coming…

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    Biomechanics

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    expel the tension in the tissue and restore comfortable movement. To preform this technique a PT will start by stretching out myofascial areas until the PT finds a barrier, or trigger point, that is stiff and inflexible (The Therapy Tree, 2016). Then, the PT will stretch that specific area and hold pressure for 90 to 120 seconds. There may be throbbing of the area before pressure is released. The object of this technique is not to break through the barrier; it is important to be gentle so not to…

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    the government and how citizens should respond to governmental issues. Thoreau’s primary method of persuasion employs the use of rhetorical strategies to make readers want to make a change by creating a sense of self-realization of the ideas in the reader. Readers realize that there is a problem that exists, and will want to fix them. Thoreau uses parallelism, rhetorical questions, and paradoxes in order to persuade people to make a change in government. In Thoreau’s essay, “On the Duty of…

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    Lukianoff and Haidt appeal to ethos in many different ways, but the main one is by providing the readers with their personal stories, which is provided in separate sidebars. “Greg Lukianoff is a constitutional lawyer and the president and CEO of the Foundation of Individual Rights in Education, which defines free speech and academic freedom on campus, and has advocated for students and faculty involved in many of the incidents this article describes” (45) When looking at the content of this…

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    The American Holocaust: Analytical Review of Ray Comfort’s Witnessing Technique and Abortion Argument Abstract The growing acceptance of abortions in America is startling. Despite backlash from certain groups abortion has been legal in the United States for over forty years (Geraldine & Wagner, 2016). It is estimated that since the landmark case, Roe vs. Wade, over 50 million abortions have been performed in the U.S (Lewis & Tandy, 1973). Ray Comfort, founder of Living Waters…

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    include the practice of technical and theoretical integration. An integrative approach can be described as an act of bringing together small components into a single system that function as one. The technical integration focuses more on the use of techniques drawn from many approaches (Corey 100). Theoretical integration emphasizes the importance of using limited theories. The belief behind this approach is that deeper possibilities are offered by restricting one’s practice to a single theory…

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    popular Rosie the Riveter “We Can Do It” poster, that have such a strong rhetorical impact. This impact also extends past the time they were popular but also into the current age because of the effective context that ethos, pathos and logos are used. Sinners In The Hands Of an Angry God by Jonathan Edwards is one of the most pronounced works of literature for its strong rhetorical techniques. This sermon utilizes many rhetorical strategies in the sermon such as pathos and imagery. This sermon…

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    In John Steinbeck’s East of Eden, Steinbeck is constantly using diction, syntax, and other rhetorical strategies to sway his readers’ opinion of characters. Not only does Steinbeck set up images of characters in the minds of readers, but he also leads readers to follow the subtle, yet effective, character parallels throughout the novel. For example, Adam Trask parallels his son Aron Trask; Charles Trask, Adam’s brother, parallels Cal Trask, another one of Adam’s sons. Quite often, readers are…

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    couple of vagrant workers in California during the depression, struggling to make their dreams come true while dealing with loneliness and the burden of Lennie’s disability. It ends in tragedy and sorrow, but the way the book was constructed and the rhetorical strategies used by the author easily convince the reader that George’s actions in the end were justified. One major strategy used by the author to justify George's actions is characterization. He often uses figurative language to compare…

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    Picture your life taking place in a small town where nothing ever happens and suddenly out of nowhere, a family murdered in cold blood. In the nonfiction novel, In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, he uses many rhetorical devices and strategies. By using these strategies he creates a nonfiction novel worth reading. Capote uses devices such as pathos, imagery, foreshadowing, and an always changing tone. He uses these devices to lead on a mysterious murder first hand in which they are investigating to…

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