please make it look like it was done by a 10th grader who does not have advanced vocabulary.
Post here on Wednesday your rhetorical analysis of the three moments of persuasion in Milton’s Paradise Lost, Book IX. Eve mounts an argument with Adam that they should work alone, the Serpent argues that Eve should eat the forbidden fruit, and Eve offers to share it with Adam. Your successful analysis will show how each argument works and will assess on what grounds and to what extent each argument is persuasive. Use Aristotle’s three modes of persuasion as your starting point — ethical appeal/appeal to trust, emotional appeal, logical appeal/appeal to reason. (HINT: all three “debates” use all three.) Two-three pages (500-750 words). No research necessary, no secondary sources, thus no bibliography: just you and Milton, please. One exception to the research restriction: you may look up words in the Oxford English Dictionary.
3 Debates Aristotle
– Eve and Adam (Lines 205-385) -Logic/reason (Logos)
– Serpent and Eve (Lines 530-790) -Trust/goodwill (Ethos)
– Eve and Adam (Lines 855-1005) -Emotion/feel (Pathos
Debate 1- What makes Eve want to work alone?
Debate 2- What makes Eve trust the serpent?
Debate 3- How does Eve eating the fruit change Adam’s opinion of her?
In John Milton’s Paradise Lost, Book IX, presents many persuasive arguments throughout the book though the characters Adam, Eve, and the Serpent. All of the characters in the book use Aristotle’s ideas of persuasion. Aristotle’s ideas of persuasion include logos (Logic), pathos (Feel and emotion), and ethos (Trust). Each character, Adam, Eve, and the Serpent, comes up with their own ways to persuade each other to get what they want.
Eve makes a proposition to Adam that they shouldn’t work together in the garden. This was the first big moment of persuasion.
https://milton.host.dartmouth.edu/reading_room/pl/book_4/text.shtml
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