Loaded language and pathos are connotative meaning. In rhetoric, loaded language means word or phrase that appeal to emotion and pathos means to persuade an audience by apearling to their emotions.
The authors ( Sebastian Arahamsson and Katja de Vries) of Dumpsters, Muffins, Waste and Law used pathos to persuade the audiences feelings and emotions by including the story of a homeless man who had "stolen" a bag of expired muffins that he came across in a dumpster and than later, he was charged with theft. While reading this story, it makes the audience feel sad, angry and hurt; which therefore showed loaded language. These examples have proofed the authors claim.
The authors ( Sebastian Arahamsson and Katja de Vries) of Dumpsters, Muffins, Waste and Law used pathos to persuade the audiences feelings and emotions by including the story of a homeless man who had "stolen" a bag of expired muffins that he came across in a dumpster and than later, he was charged with theft. While reading this story, it makes the audience feel sad, angry and hurt; which therefore showed loaded language. These examples have proofed the authors claim.
Ethos means to convince an audience of the author's credibility or character. For example, Arahamsson and Vries, the authors of Dumpster, Muffins, Waste and Law provided many sources to give credibility and to persuade the audience to their claim. This source demonstrated the authors' claim and it persuaded the audience to conceive what the authors were trying to affirm.
Logos means to convince an audence by use of reason. In the article of Dumpster, Waste and Law, the logos appear when the authors proved the reason to be that the government cares more private property, regulations and the law than food waste. " The
diagram seems to suggest that, carelessness with regard to food at the level of the consumer is unevenly distributed geographically and globally. These practices of sifting through commercial or residential trash to find food, that has been thrown away but is still edible, goes by many names: dumpster diving, dumpstering, skipping, waste picking, practicing freeganism, tatting, gleaning, binning, scavenging, bin-diving, containering, urban foraging, etc. Beyond the names, daily life continues much the same way." With this quote and the diagram, the authors were showing the reason to convined the audiences to focus on food waste.
The authors were Sebastian Abrahamsson and Katja de Vries. The article, “Dumpsters, Muffins, Waste and Law refers to a homeless man that was convicted of thievery but then later released. Sebastian Abrahamsson also wrote, “Between Motion and Rest: Encountering Bodies in/on Display.”
Katja de Vries studied at Sciences Po in Paris, achieved two masters degrees
with distinction at Leiden University (in both Civil Law and Cognitive Psychology) and graduated in 2007 at Oxford University; she has also written Identity Revolution: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives.
The gist of the essay was whether or not a man that had stolen food was truly a criminal or not. The authors did not believe "stealing" food which the man had already been doing for several
years while the supermarket was in full aware of this act then suddenly decides against
it. But from different points a view, could taking food from a
dumpster that nobody no longer wanted, be considered a crime?
The article it self seem to be very ambiguous. The authors seem to ponder how it could be a crime when a person takes from a dumpster to feed them selves, but yet informs the reader how unsanitary and unhygienic "dumpster-diving" really is.
Katja de Vries studied at Sciences Po in Paris, achieved two masters degrees
with distinction at Leiden University (in both Civil Law and Cognitive Psychology) and graduated in 2007 at Oxford University; she has also written Identity Revolution: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives.
The gist of the essay was whether or not a man that had stolen food was truly a criminal or not. The authors did not believe "stealing" food which the man had already been doing for several
years while the supermarket was in full aware of this act then suddenly decides against
it. But from different points a view, could taking food from a
dumpster that nobody no longer wanted, be considered a crime?
The article it self seem to be very ambiguous. The authors seem to ponder how it could be a crime when a person takes from a dumpster to feed them selves, but yet informs the reader how unsanitary and unhygienic "dumpster-diving" really is.
Definition: emotive is someone or something with the ability to express emotions.
language is speech or other forms of communication.
Emotive Language: Is someone or something with the ability to express emotions through speech or other forms of communication.
Example: The food demand of those who are unable to buy or otherwise obtain the food that they need to survive and the enormous wastage of food that is still edible seem to be, at least from a “rational” point of view, two pieces of a puzzle that would not be too hard to solve: excess food that would otherwise be wasted could, for example, be donated to those in need.
Final Thoughts: The authors trigger emotion by pointing out that there are people in need of food; they retrieve their meals from garbage, while others take their food for granted by easily throw it away.
language is speech or other forms of communication.
Emotive Language: Is someone or something with the ability to express emotions through speech or other forms of communication.
Example: The food demand of those who are unable to buy or otherwise obtain the food that they need to survive and the enormous wastage of food that is still edible seem to be, at least from a “rational” point of view, two pieces of a puzzle that would not be too hard to solve: excess food that would otherwise be wasted could, for example, be donated to those in need.
Final Thoughts: The authors trigger emotion by pointing out that there are people in need of food; they retrieve their meals from garbage, while others take their food for granted by easily throw it away.