Read this excerpt from George W. Bush's 9/11 speech:

Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shatter steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve.
Which audience appeals does Bush most clearly use in this excerpt?
A. Justos and ethos
B. Ethos and logos
C. Pathos and ethos
D. Logos and pathos

Respuesta :

The correct answer is C. Pathos and ethos

Explanation:

All pathos, ethos, and logos refer to different techniques a speaker can use to convince the audience about something. In the case of pathos the speaker appeals to the feelings or emotions of the audience to prove a point, this means the speaker uses some situation experienced by the audience, an anecdote or a story to provoke certain emotions in the audience and prove what he is saying is valid and true. On the other hand, ethos refers to the use of ideas or believes about a person, community, institution or nation to convince the audience about something. In the case of Bush speech about the 9/11 attacks he is appealing to the Pathos, because he knows this incident evokes a lot of emotions in his audience as it was a very striking incident for all citizens of the U.S., but also he uses Ethos as he refers to the foundations of America and the American resolve which are both beliefs about the U.S. that made the audience believe despite the attacks and their feelings about these, the terrorist have just destroyed the buildings but not the foundation of the nation.