On the crucial importance of rhetoric

IMG_8164As is well known, we officially live in an era of post-truths and alternative facts. Even though we have arguably always lived in it, to an extent, the current cultural and political climate has moved even scientists, a group of people notoriously shy when it comes to social and political engagement, to get to the streets and protest in defense of science. Who would have thought.

A recent Gallup poll showed that — despite the overwhelming scientific evidence — only 45% of Americans are seriously worried about climate change. But the worst news comes when one looks at the details: the partisan split is incredibly sharp: 66% of Democratic voters are worried (wait, only 66%??), and a mere 18% of Republican voters are. When we add to that the likely observation that even those who are concerned with climate change express the feeling more as a badge of identification with the party line than because they genuinely understand what the problem is, we are in dire straits indeed.

This is why I found an article by Tim Requarth in Slate to be a breath of fresh air. Even though, as I’ll explain in a bit, it’s actually very, very old news. The title of the piece says it all: “Scientists, stop thinking explaining science will fix things.” Requarth actually studies the science of science communication, and he thinks it’s ironic that many scientists and science communicators insist in endorsing a model of public understanding of science that has been shown to be empirically false.

“The theory many scientists seem to swear by,” says Requarth, “is technically known as the deficit model, which states that people’s opinions differ from scientific consensus because they lack scientific knowledge.”

The problem is that the theory, always somewhat unconvincing, has been falsified by research conducted back in 2010 by Yale psychologist Dan Kahan. He surveyed a large sample of people, classifying them (on the basis of appropriate questionnaires) along a “cultural worldview” scale that roughly mirrors the conservative-liberal continuum in the US. He also assessed each person scientific literacy on the basis of politically neutral questions, such as “True or False: Electrons are smaller than atoms.” The last step was to ask his subjects about their opinions on climate change.

The expectation, if the deficit model is correct, was that the higher the scientific literacy the more people should agree with consensus scientific opinion on climate change, irrespective of cultural worldview. I probably don’t have to tell you that that’s not at all what happened. “Kahan found that increased scientific literacy actually had a small negative effect: the conservative-leaning respondents who knew the most about science thought climate change posed the least risk.” The higher the scientific literacy, the more likely one’s view are to be polarized along a political dimension. (The probable explanation is that smart and educated people are simply more capable to rationalize away discrepancies, or to come up with reasonable-sounding explanations for why the scientists are wrong.)

Here is an interesting twist, however. Kahan also asked his subjects their opinion about what climate scientists actually believed. In this case, people with higher scientific literacy — regardless of cultural worldview — were more likely to correctly identify the dominant scientific opinion. The polarization had disappeared, but this showed that even when people do understand the scientific consensus they may not accept it because of cultural-political reasons.

And it gets worse. Psychologists have also amply demonstrated what they call the backfire effect: the more you present facts contrary to someone’s worldview, the more the person in question digs in. (And before you begin to smugly think that of course only stupid or ignorant conservatives do it, think again, the effect cuts across the political spectrum.)

This is no news to me at all. Back in the mid- and late ’90s I did a number of public debates with creationists, when I was a faculty in evolutionary biology at the University of Tennessee. (Curious? Here is one against Ken Hovind; and here is one against Duane Gish.) One of the things I discovered quickly, especially by observing the creationists I debated, was that the whole thing had relatively little to do with arguments and evidence, and a lot to do with personalities and emotions.

One of my big scoring moments was against Jonathan Wells of the infamous Discovery Institute, when I revealed to the audience that — contra Wells’ statement from a few minutes before — he had embarked in a PhD in molecular biology not out of genuine curiosity for the science, but under direct order to destroy “Darwinism” from the inside, an order given to him by the Reverend Moon, whose church he belonged to. The gasp in the audience — mostly of Evangelicals with little or no sympathy for Moon — was audible, and my opponent lost credibility. Someone would say that was an ad hominem attack, and I’d say that it was, and I’m pretty damn proud of it. (My intention was to expose the lie, but it turned out that his church affiliation was more important even than that. Go figure.)

Now, Requarth isn’t saying that scientists shouldn’t explain the science, just as I kept on explaining evolution to my audiences. But that’s not enough, and by itself is actually counterproductive. Research shows that one needs to make a personal connection with the audience and gain their trust. Requarth therefore suggests that “it may be more worthwhile to figure out how to talk about science with people [scientists] already know, through, say, local and community interactions, than it is to try to publish explainers on national news sites. And they might consider writing op-eds for their local papers, focusing on why science matters to their particular communities.”

Requarth quotes Gretchen Goldman, research director of the Union of Concerned Scientists Center for Science and Democracy, who says: “a better approach is to reframe the issue. Don’t just keep explaining why climate change is real — explain how climate change will hurt public health or the local economy. Communication that appeals to values, not just intellect, research shows, can be far more effective.”

Requarth concludes: “the obstacles faced by science communicators are not epistemological but cultural. The skills required are not those of a university lecturer but a rhetorician.”

Indeed. Which brings me to Aristotle. Regular readers know that for a while now I’ve been on a quest to revisit the value of ancient Greco-Roman philosophy, not because I think the ancients were infallible (they were obviously wrong on a large number of issues, especially scientific ones), but because we have a tendency to reinvent the wheel out of an unfounded sense of superiority of the modern view on anything that preceded it.

Aristotle would have not been surprised in the least by Requarth’s remarks, and indeed anticipated and discussed in detail the whole issue in his famous book on Rhetoric, which is still the obligatory reference point for the modern discipline that goes by that name. Rhetoric has gotten a bad wrap these days, and unfortunately is no longer taught in schools. It should be, especially to wannabe science communicators.

Interestingly, Aristotle begins the book by saying that rhetoric is the counterpart of dialectic, and both rely on logic. The idea is that logic is necessary to make sure one has gotten things right. But then dialectic is used by experts in philosophical and scientific dialogue, while rhetoric is used to communicate to a public of non experts. This isn’t talking down, it’s an accurate and pragmatic assessment of reality.

Aristotle tells us in book II (and goes on to elaborate later on) that the rhetorician needs to use three tools to persuade her audience: correct patterns of reasoning (logos), establishing credibility (ethos), and a good understanding of the emotions and psychology of the audience (pathos).

The mistake of many modern science communicators is to rely almost exclusively on logos, and especially of ignoring pathos. If you make the converse error, then you are essentially a sophist, like Republican Chair of the House Science Committee, Lamar Smith of Tennessee, who recently told an audience at the Heartland Institute that he will begin referring to climate science as “politically correct science,” in a naked attempt to taint scientific expertise with political partisanship and arouse the emotions of his constituents.

In chapter 1 of book II of Rhetoric, Aristotle observes that people change their mind largely for emotional reasons, hence the importance of pathos. He doesn’t spend a lot of time on logos because he devoted other works to it, but notes that ethos is comprised of three characteristics of the speaker: wisdom (in particular, phronesis, i.e., practical wisdom), virtue (arete), and good will (eunoia). I can think of very, very few science popularizers in recent times who can be said to possess such characteristics at least in part, perhaps Carl Sagan being one of the exceptions. (And sure enough, I’ve met people back in Tennessee who told me that the beginning of their long journey from fundamentalism to science had started by reading a Sagan article in the low-brow Parade magazine, which many of Sagan’s colleagues dismissed with disdain.)

In chapters 12-17 of that same book Aristotle goes on to explain ethos in more detail, how one actually goes about adapting one’s speech to the character of her audience. He tells us, for instance, that young people are afraid of being belittled, because they long to be taken seriously; old people, instead, are more cynical and distrustful, probably — he says — because the horizon of their future is much smaller. Consequently, young people pay more attention to arguments focused on their future, older people to arguments highlighting short-term gains.

Finally, Book III discusses the notion of virtue in a rhetorician, and warns that it is inappropriate to speak by hyperbole, because that’s a willful attempt to deceive one’s audience, which is not a virtuous course of action. (I will leave it as an exercise to the reader to identify at least three contemporary science popularizers who often use hyperbolic language…) The same book also reminds us that we still need logos, that is, we need to make sure that we do have good arguments. We can’t (or, rather, ought not to) just bullshit people via ethos and pathos.

Learning from Aristotle as much as from Requarth, we science (and philosophy, and everything else) communicators need to pay attention to the three components of rhetoric. Failing to do so will not only condemn us to a frustrating ineffectiveness, but it would be rather ironic for people who pride themselves on reason and evidence to disregard both in their very attempt to defend them.

153 thoughts on “On the crucial importance of rhetoric

  1. saphsin

    (Not sure if this is a bit off tangent to what you said here but just trying to squeeze another point in)

    I also honestly think that a lot of scientists just don’t understand politics (and unlike the postmodernist critics, I’m saying this with deep respect for their enterprise)

    I’m firm on the belief that most things about social realities is penetrable to the average committed teenager. It takes thinking and some work to figure it out, as well as an awareness of your own motives and how self-deception works, but nothing that requires special knowledge or expertise.

    That being said, it requires hard work, and I think a lot of scientists simply jump on how politics works when they’re actually just spinning off what they’ve heard by the people around them and the mainstream media.

    Like I see all this talk about scientific illiteracy being a problem in our politics (I think there’s truth to it) and people like Neil Tyson went on Bill Maher’s show explaining how politicians all have degrees in things like political science or law but not in the sciences. But that’s sort of missing the point. I think Bernie Sanders is right that the Republican Politicians don’t deny the research claims of medical institutes when it doesn’t dampen on their interests but are so committed to opposing the consensus with regards to Climate Change. The evidence shows that it’s not because they’re committed to rejecting the sciences (although that may be true to an extent) but it’s because the Republican Party is bought out by the Fossil Fuel Industry, the Koch Brothers and other corporations.

    And no, I don’t think meritocracy or scientific awareness actually solves the problem of politics. It doesn’t mean you have the right values, commitments, have the right ideas about economics, or that you’re immune to the influences of institutional pressures and political power. Von Neumann was undeniably beyond a scientific genius but he was fanatically right-wing.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. saphsin

    More on topic, Katharine Hayhoe is a Christian climate scientist actually trying to structure her arguments in a way that reaches out to evangelical Christians and has reached some level of success. Good for her! But of course, we Atheists (I am one just to be clear) have to feel all smug and proud about being intellectually superior, so of course we won’t copy her efforts.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Hayhoe

    Liked by 2 people

  3. saphsin

    One of her videos.

    I mean I’m honestly uncomfortable using the type of rhetoric she recommends when reaching out to evangelical Christians, but I think that if it means the world being destroyed vs. our own comfort & ideals, I think the choice should be obvious.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. SocraticGadfly

    Saph: Living in Texas, I’m quite familiar with Hayhoe and her work, yes

    Massimo: That said, “liberals” can be tribal on some science issues, too.

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  5. valariansteel

    Very timely topic

    Some random comments:
    1) I appreciate your metaphorically referring to McRequarth’s article as a “breath of fresh air”, particularly concerning the topic.
    2) I am familiar w/ Dr. Hayhoe having seen her on TV (and noting that she teaches at Texas Tech, where I got my BA). If you read the entry at saphsin’s link, you will see that she has been treated just as shabbily as any other scientist who believes in climate change (see s.v. “Newt Gingrich book”). Her husband is a pastor at an evangelical church. Contra saphsin “. . . if it means the world being destroyed . . . choice should be obvious,” I don’t think that line of reasoning registers with evangelicals.

    The science is still “unsettled” in their minds, and in the hands of a largely unbelieving scientific community. Climatic change is kind of like evolution to them . . . no one has seen it happen (despite the fact that climate change is occurring rapidly, before our eyes).

    3) I’m even afraid of evangelical eschatology, which many believe points to a period of future tribulation (famines, wars, why can’t climate change be part of this?), followed by a rapture (or perhaps “second” coming), in which true believers will be saved. At least these were the beliefs at Dallas Seminary (when I graduated w/ Th.M. in 1979). Such beliefs die hard, since they are encapsulated and passed on in doctrinal statements. Oh, BTW, God also promised a “new heavens and a new earth.”

    We certainly have our work cut out for us. My wife & I marched Saturday in Dallas to bring awareness to climate change. Us two, and the 300 other individuals (at most). I don’t believe in giving up. There is no plan(et) B”. We are going to have engage people emotionally as well as intellectually. Even evangelicals don’t know when (or if?) these eschatological events will occur. Therefore, we have to take care of the planet now. Continuing adverse weather events and climate extremes will remind everyone how fragile our lives on planet earth are. BTW, it isn’t “settled” that the science is “unsettled.”

    Massimo, thanks for your encouragement in this posting.

    Liked by 2 people

  6. saphsin

    I’m sympathetic to what you said, I’m just saying she’s making the effort that Massimo outlined regarding Aristotle’s pathos to scrape off some on the other side with some success, even if limited, when others aren’t, and I applaud her for that.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Bunsen Burner

    Kahan’s results and many others like it have become quite intensely discussed items on many climate change fora such as skepticalscience or realclimate. The discussions always come unstuck however at the problem of access to media. It doesn’t matter how good your rhetoric is if you are only given 10 minutes to make your case, and have to argue against a climate change denier brought in ‘to provide balance’.

    And lets also remember that rhetoric is a double edged sword. The ‘other side’ not only uses it too, but brings to bear all the dark arts of public relations, marketing, and lobbying. We have a fairly mature and pernicious industry trying its best to mislead and obfuscate the science of climate change.

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  8. Massimo Post author

    Bunsen,

    Yes, of course rhetoric is a two-edge sword, that’s why Aristotle insists it has to be practice “virtuously,” and also why logic is one of the three integral components.

    As for access to the media, true, but one can show empathy for someone even in ten minutes. Indeed, I would argue that it is easier to do that than to explain climate science.

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  9. Bunsen Burner

    Massimo:

    What do you mean by showing empathy in my media context? A scientist is invited to say something on tv for 10 minutes. They certainly don’t have the time to present many facts. But what do you mean by them using empathy instead? And like I said, there will also be a climate change denier on this show to make their plea.

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  10. Michael Fugate

    I have often referred people to the National Academies Press publications on teaching and learning – especially “How People Learn”.

    A short summary.

    To develop competence in an area of inquiry, people must: (a) have a deep foundation of factual knowledge, (b) understand facts and ideas in the context of a conceptual framework, and (c) organize knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application.

    People have preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged and their misconceptions are not addressed, they may fail to grasp new concepts, or they may learn them but revert to their preconceptions when convenient.

    A “metacognitive” approach to instruction teaches people how to take control of their own learning by defining and monitoring their own progress in achieving goals.

    Changing people’s minds has consequences – often throwing them out of their ingroup.

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  11. synred

    The probable explanation is that smart and educated people are simply more capable to rationalize away discrepancies, or to come up with reasonable-sounding explanations for why the scientists are wrong.)

    I little knowledge can be dangerous.

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  12. synred

    The global warm models are usually cited as a black-box. The underlying physics it actually very simple, though not simple enough for somebody who merely ‘knows’ electrons are smaller then atoms.

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  13. synred

    I don’t think that line of reasoning registers with evangelicals.

    Many Evangelical think ‘God’ is about to take out the world anyway so they need not worry about global warming.

    Such irrational people are not going to be convinced by reason or rhetoric. Maybe after the rapture, those of us ‘left behind’ can do something about it.

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  14. Massimo Post author

    Bunsen,

    I mean what the author I link to at the beginning of the OP means: shift the focus away from dry facts and onto arguing that many people will suffer if we dont’ take actions. Neighborhoods and cities will go under water; mass migration will disrupt the world’s economy; and so forth.

    Synred,

    There is no magic bullet, so, yes, some people will not be moved no matter what. But success doesn’t hinge on convincing everyone, only a solid majority.

    Liked by 2 people

  15. saphsin

    Massimo

    I think we have to do more than that. We have to make it clear how it’s going to personally affect “them”. Unfortunately, they don’t really care about how people are going to suffer in the Third World or in coastal cities that they don’t live in, you can tell by their other positions on policy.

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  16. Massimo Post author

    Saphsin,

    Yes that too, which is why I mentioned disruption of economy. Whatever works, so long as it is done virtuously and informed by logic (and evidence), as Aristotle would say. There really is no alternative, as it is becoming painfully clear.

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  17. saphsin

    Ok I hear you, though I think we have to simplify it for them to care enough, they don’t really care about the “economy” in abstract. Like it has to be about it taking away their jobs, or pollute their communities, or something that they can relate to. Because otherwise, they’re so blinded by Fox Propaganda that they buy all the free market anti-government program nonsense, but while also 45% of them supporting Medicare for All and much higher supporting Medicare & Medicaid. They have really contradictory beliefs, that don’t quite run through monolithically either.

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  18. synred

    But success doesn’t hinge on convincing everyone, only a solid majority.

    One can only hope. So far the Koch’s can hire better rhetoricians … David funds Nova :_(

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  19. synred

    Al Gore tried with his movie, but the rhetorical approach leads to some hyperbolic scenes that are easy targets for the denialist. E.g.,big ice falls are not new to global warming era. They woul occur even during an ice age.

    The subtly that specific events can’t be blamed on global warming is difficult for people to understand — hence such idiocy as senators throwing snow balls to ‘demonstrate’ that warming is myth/conspiracy. Presumably Senator Inoffe ‘knows’ electrons are smaller than atoms or even nuclei.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2015/02/26/jim-inhofes-snowball-has-disproven-climate-change-once-and-for-all/?utm_term=.d7f0080d5016

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  20. ejwinner

    “The goal of all argumentation (…) is to create or increase the adherence of minds to the theses presented for their assent. An efficacious argument is one which succeeds in increasing this intensity of adherence among those who hear it in such a way as to set in motion the intended action (a positive action or an abstention from action) or at least in creating in the hearers a willingness to act, which will appear at the right moment.” – Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca, The New Rhetoric (Wilkinson and Weaver trans.), U of Notre Dame, 1969.

    Academics in many fields have long held that the primary function of language is to communicate ideas, and to sort the false from the true, the true being acquired by audiences as knowledge.

    That’s clearly not the case. Language can be used this way, but its first intention, as we can see in all cultures, and as we see in the training of children, is to get people to do things.

    In order to engage a succeful public rhetoric, one needs to first decide what it is one wants the audience to do; then one needs to understand the audience and what moves them to action. Finally one has to shape one’s rhetoric to the contours of the motivations of the audience. That is the most difficult part – that’s where rhetoric can get ugly, and the boundaries of the ethics of which Aristotle writes gets pushed. (And Aristotle well understood that). But there is no alternative. Failure to mold one’s rhetoric to the motivations of the audience may get one some personal sense of being ‘above the fray,’ so to speak – but being above the fray leaves one isolated and powerless.

    Politics is a dirty business. Purists make great critics, but useless politicians.

    Liked by 1 person

  21. Daniel Kaufman

    Rhetoric has fallen on hard times in the modern era, because of the modern conception of autonomy and its connection to respect and thus, morality. Rhetoric is, by its nature, manipulative, insofar as it bypasses the rational agency of the other person, and this represents one of the fundamental pillars of the modern conception of immorality — that is, to treat another person as a means rather than as an end. Indeed, this was Aldous Huxley’s chief criticism/worry about marketing and advertising and especially, the importation of techniques from marketing and advertising into politics. (The relevant portion begins at roughly 6:16)

    Now, of course, everyone who proposes to manipulate the public on behalf of this cause or the other is absolutely certain that it is necessary, because the cause is imperative, urgent, etc. Hence the apocalypticism that typically precedes such efforts at manipulation, not to mention the obligatory amassing of expert authorities.

    The trouble, of course is that experts have been wrong in the past — very wrong, in fact — and apocalypticism is rarely — very rarely — true (for obvious reasons). It is difficult to know then, which manipulations on the part of which alleged apocalypses are warranted and which are not. Which is, in part, why those who are concerned about the dignity and sovereignty of the individual — i.e, all genuine liberals — err on the side of non-manipulation. In this sense, non-manipulation is much like liberalism and democracy themselves. It and they are the worst choices, except for all the others.

    = = =

    Notice that these are not necessarily my views, but rather, they represent my effort to try to understand the issues surrounding the question of rhetoric, in the modern framework. To the extent that one rejects this or that feature of the modern framework, then, my remarks may not apply. It is worth noting however, that whether one “accepts” the modern framework or not, it nonetheless is the framework in which the overwhelming majority of people in the modern world are operating.

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  22. Thomas Jones

    Dan K, I don’t intend to gainsay your point here, especially since you couch it, as you say, in the modern framework. In addition, there is little to quarrel with when Huxley offers insightful cautionary aspects. He, of course, is not alone in this matter. For example, the American journalist Edward R. Murrow expressed similar concerns.

    But, as Massimo suggests in his OP, Aristotle might have viewed such perversions of rhetoric as sophistry, or as MP expresses it: “The mistake of many modern science communicators is to rely almost exclusively on logos, and especially of ignoring pathos. If you make the converse error, then you are essentially a sophist [or a propagandist].”
    Although from Massimo’s account it would seem that the triad of logos, ethos, and pathos carry equal weight for Aristotle, in my own evaluations I tend to focus first on ethos as MP describes it: Ethos as reflected in Aristotle’s explication of rhetoric entails three characteristics: “wisdom (in particular, phronesis, i.e., practical wisdom), virtue (arete), and good will (eunoia).” Absent some sense of ethos in a communication, I’m not likely fully attend to it and may in fact be dismissive of it, pathos, as others have suggested, is not unidirectional but is bidirectional, particularly when ethos is established.

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  23. dawso007

    It is a common error to think that human thought can be parsed into a perfectly rational – Spock-like mode and thought that is more based on emotion. We know from studies in humans that one cannot exist without the other. Beyond that – preferences are also reinforced by the same systems operative in the human reward system.

    Physicians failed to engage politicians and bureaucrats at the rhetorical level for 30 years and as a result – they are not longer even remotely in control of the healthcare system. In fact the healthcare system for the most part is fueled and run on rhetoric these days.

    Let’s hope scientists don’t make the same mistake. The March was a good start. Some Vietnam protestor level emotion and rhetoric would not hurt.

    George Dawson

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  24. Daniel Kaufman

    I would argue that in the modern context, the comfortable relationship between rhetoric and reason that Aristotle imagined, is unsustainable, given that we no longer accept the key concepts necessary to make it sustainable. So one can call the current manipulations “sophistry” rather than “rhetoric,” but that’s all that one is doing: calling things things.

    That is in good part, the argument of MacIntyre in “After Virtue,” and it is one that will take far more work to resist than has been offered by anyone thus far. Unfortunately, most contemporary scholars are not nearly close enough either in ability or breadth and depth of knowledge as MacIntyre to do so, so as far as I am concerned, the challenge has yet to be met and we are left with the uncomfortable dichotomy with which he confronts us: Nietzsche or Aristotle.

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  25. Massimo Post author

    Dan,

    This seems to be a parallel argument to the one you make about virtue ethics: we no longer accept some of Aristotle’s premises therefore… But, as in the case of virtue ethics, I don’t buy it. In fact, this case seems to me even less problematic than virtue ethics. Why wouldn’t Aristotle’s approach to rhetoric (which, incidentally, is still widely taught in courses about rhetoric) not be a good one? Has human nature changed in the meantime so that we don’t need to make connections with people, or so that people don’t respond to combinations of facts and emotions? I’d like to hear what, exactly, the problem is in dropping teleology, in this case.

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