Ethos, pathos, and logos: The ancient formula for persuasion

By Koffi |

June 11, 2026 |

We have all been in a meeting where someone made a perfectly reasonable point and still failed to persuade the room.

The numbers were correct. The slide deck was organized. The conclusion made sense. Still, people leaned back in their chairs, checked their phones, or politely nodded while quietly deciding not to move.

Then someone else said nearly the same thing in a different way, and suddenly the room changed.

People listened. People asked questions. People started to see the idea as possible.

This can feel unfair. We like to believe that good ideas should win on their own. If the evidence is strong, the audience should accept it. If the argument is logical, people should follow it. If the solution is obvious, people should act.

That is a comforting belief, but it is not how communication usually works.

Aristotle understood this a long time ago. In Rhetoric, he described persuasion as working through three connected appeals: ethos, pathos, and logos. Ethos is credibility. Pathos is emotion. Logos is logic. Together, they explain why people believe, care, and act.

Persuasion is not just the transfer of information. It is the movement of trust, feeling, and reason in the same direction.

Use this idea: A strong message does not only answer, “Is this true?” It also answers, “Can I trust you?” and “Why should this matter to me?”

Where you see it

You see ethos, pathos, and logos every day, even when no one uses those words.

A manager announces a difficult change. Employees are not only listening to the plan. They are listening for credibility. Has this leader been honest before? Does this person understand what the change will cost the team? Is this just another polished message from the top? That is ethos.

A parent talks to a teenager about responsibility. The facts may be clear, but the conversation will not go far if the child feels attacked, dismissed, or misunderstood. Before the lesson can land, the emotional temperature of the room has to be managed. That is pathos.

A doctor explains why a patient should change a habit. The patient may trust the doctor and feel concerned, but still need a clear explanation. What is the risk? What is the benefit? What happens if nothing changes? That is logos.

The same pattern shows up in sales pitches, sermons, political speeches, classroom teaching, nonprofit fundraising, job interviews, and everyday disagreements at the kitchen table.

We often think persuasion begins with the argument. It usually begins before that.

It begins with the person speaking.

How it helps you

Ethos reminds us that the messenger matters.

This does not mean we should blindly trust confident people. Confidence can be cheap. Some people speak with great certainty and very little wisdom. Ethos is not volume. It is not status. It is not a job title. It is the audience’s judgment that the speaker is believable enough to hear.

In practical terms, ethos comes from competence, honesty, consistency, and goodwill. Do you know what you are talking about? Are you telling the truth? Have your actions matched your words? Do you care about the people affected by your message?

Pathos reminds us that people are not machines.

We do not simply receive information, process it, and update our behavior. We carry fears, hopes, frustrations, loyalties, pride, grief, and fatigue into every conversation. A message that ignores emotion may be technically correct and practically useless.

This is where many professional communicators get into trouble. They think emotion is manipulation. It can be, of course. But emotion is also how people recognize importance. If you remove all feeling from a message, you may also remove the signal that tells people why it matters.

Logos reminds us that emotion still needs structure.

A moving story without logic can stir people up without helping them think clearly. A confident speaker without evidence can create damage. A persuasive message needs reasons, examples, order, and proportion. Aristotle treated these appeals as part of the art of persuasion, not as random decoration added after the fact.

The mistake is separating the three.

Ethos without logos becomes empty authority.

Pathos without logos becomes manipulation.

Logos without ethos and pathos becomes a document no one wants to read.

How to use it today

Before your next important message, do not start by asking, “What do I want to say?”

Start with three better questions.

First, ask: Why should they trust me on this?

You may need to acknowledge a past mistake. You may need to show your experience without bragging. You may need to admit what you do not know. Credibility grows when people sense that you are not hiding the hard parts.

Second, ask: What do they feel about this already?

If your team is tired, do not speak as if they are excited. If your audience is afraid, do not drown them in cheerful language. If people feel ignored, do not begin with a lecture on efficiency. Meet the emotion honestly before trying to move the conversation forward.

Third, ask: What reasoning do they need in order to follow me?

Do not bury people under information. Give them the path. Show the problem, the reason it matters, the options, and the consequence of each option. Good logos is not a pile of facts. It is a clear road.

Here is a simple way to think about it:

Ethos: Why should they trust the speaker?
Pathos: Why should they care about the message?
Logos: Why does the message make sense?

When all three are present, persuasion becomes less like pushing and more like guiding.

One thing to remember

The danger with Aristotle’s model is that people can use it as a toolkit for manipulation.

That is the shadow side of persuasion. A speaker can fake credibility, exploit emotion, and arrange selective facts to lead people somewhere they should not go. We see this in bad advertising, dishonest politics, toxic leadership, and everyday personal pressure.

So the point is not simply to become more persuasive.

The point is to become more responsible with persuasion.

There is a difference between helping people see and trying to control what they see. There is a difference between touching emotion and exploiting pain. There is a difference between simplifying logic and hiding inconvenient truth.

Persuasion should not be a trick. It should be a form of service.

When we communicate well, we help people make better judgments. We do not remove their freedom. We respect it.

Use this theory today

Before your next important conversation, notice one place where facts alone may not be enough.

Ask yourself: Does this person need more trust, more emotional clarity, or better reasoning before they can hear me?

Practice building your message with all three parts: credibility, care, and logic.

Avoid the mistake of thinking that being right automatically makes you persuasive. Sometimes the truth still needs a door. Ethos, pathos, and logos are three ways to open it.

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