One minute turned to five minutes, then an hour, then
through the night but I never noticed. What about food? What about sleep? Where
did time hide, that I couldn’t see it, neither did I notice it pass me by? Just
in front of me, bared into my eyes, like super glue, I couldn’t disengage. The world
was in my hand, and I did control it—that was the addiction. Video game
addiction is real, real enough to “stop other healthy lifestyle behaviors, such
as going out with friends, working or attending school”, stated Connor Murphy,
in his blog “5
five signs of a video game addiction”. He uses logos to point out the
downside of video game addiction. Though he states explicitly the facts
associated with addiction, it overlaps to appealing to the emotions (pathos). For
example, “when…gaming is removed it feels earth-shattering to the addict”.
Earth-shattering invokes a strong emotion, like that of the addict to gaming.
Another blog, “5
Steps to overcome Video game addiction”, the blogger Justin Robert makes
use of ethos through his strong personal experience with this addiction. His once
being addicted and overcoming it, makes him an expert and enhances the efficacy
of the tips he has suggested for overcoming addiction.
Both blogs uses bullet point style to convey their message—taking
it one step at a time. They are different, in that one talks about the signs
and the other the cure. The author of signs of addiction is a marketing manager,
so his perspective leans towards a logical and scientific approach, talking
about “dopamine” effect on a game addict. And the other blogger is just a
former addict which brings credibility to his work by being an overcomer.
Both posts were able
to convey the gripping claws of addiction, and the second, how to overcome it
through the rhetoric of logos and ethos, respectively.
I agree that Connor uses pathos to invoke this overall feeling of disdain against the dangerous pitfalls of addictive gaming. However he also uses a moderate amount of credibility to appeal to ethos by using testimonies from the Cold Creek Wellness Center.
ReplyDeleteAlso Justin does the same thing, however he invokes pathos and ethos to justify his claim to end his addiction.