Using Rhetoric, Issue four talked about arguable assertions.
Stating that speakers are always pointing out how circumstances have changed
from one phenomenon to another. A good argument is a lot like a good
conversation. This is when dialogs have been used to present arguments about
many philosophical, social, and political issues. An argument also needs
grounds or evidence to support your position. The four questions that need to
be identified are what or (facts), how (circumstances), who (Relationships), and
why (reasons). Think about the kind of evidence that will work in the correct
context of your argument. When a claim is made make sure that you have
supporting evidence to support that, and you will want to cite this to look
more credible. Make sure that the claim has a firm connection to your evidence
and present your reasons for making that connection. For each academic argument
they are made up of paragraphs and in the paragraph there is evidence,
analysis, implications, and/or context.
So
what, who cares is a funny article in the sense that it is very true what they
are telling us, it's just relayed in a humorous way. Speakers don’t always
address the crucial question of why their arguments matter. Rather than assume
that that audience will know why their claims matter, all writers need to
answer the “so what?” and “who cares?” questions up front. If we all do this
while we are writing we might find some sentences that don’t fit as well as we
would like with our proposition. We might realize that the message we are
trying to relay doesn’t have the effect on others as we thought, and then we
might consider rewording our statements. Who cares literally asks you to
identify a person or group whom cares about your claims. So what asks about the
real world applications and consequences of those claims!
This is one of the readings who actually helped me a lot and it feels like you enjoyed it as well. The two questions are so easy to remember and “So What? Who Cares?” actually popped up in my thought a few times over the last week when writing different things in the paper for this class but also a speech I was preparing for my public speaking class. Usually I forget the things I read pretty quickly, but these words are stuck which is of course, a good thing!
ReplyDeleteI agree with you on the fact that we spend too much time writing without really thinking about why or how it matters to the audience and that if we start thing about it more often, our writing will probably improve! I liked your input on this reading though, keep up the good work! ☺