In this paper, I contend that evidence-focused strategies of science communication may be complemented by possibly more effective rhetorical arguments in current public debates on vaccines. I analyse the case of direct science communication - that is, communication of evidence - and show that it is difficult to effectively communicate evidential standards of science in the presence of well-equipped anti-science movements. Instead, I argue that effective rhetorical tools involve ad hominem strategies, that is, arguments involving claims of expertise. I provide a rationale, and sketch a methodology, for using ad hominem arguments in science communication
The communication of scientific knowledge is traditionally oriented towards objective truth and fact...
As a totality, the contributions to this issue demonstrate that examining the rhetoric of science fu...
from a “rhetoric of conclusions ” to a social process of knowledge construction via scientific argum...
Challenges to scientific evidence impacts negatively on a range of health, well-being and environmen...
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> <em>Communicating scientific concepts to non-scientific audiences can ...
The purpose of this capstone is to identify rhetoric in public-facing science communication, and to ...
We argue that the rhetoric of science occupies an important niche in contemporary science studies. A...
This investigation compares how COVID-19 vaccination supporters and refusers make use of rhetorical ...
The paper identifies ten types of arguments that are found to run through time when scientist-writer...
The nature of popular science discourse in recent decades has acquired a convincing function, while ...
Our work aims to make the arguments underlying a scientific controversy more clear and more understa...
Rhetoric, as the theory and practice of the discursive means of human influence, and science, as the...
The Science Communication Challenge explores and discusses the whys – as distinct from the hows – of...
This thesis project examines how scientific authority is produced through rhetorical practices inste...
Differences in viewpoints between science and society, like in for example the HPV-vaccination debat...
The communication of scientific knowledge is traditionally oriented towards objective truth and fact...
As a totality, the contributions to this issue demonstrate that examining the rhetoric of science fu...
from a “rhetoric of conclusions ” to a social process of knowledge construction via scientific argum...
Challenges to scientific evidence impacts negatively on a range of health, well-being and environmen...
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> <em>Communicating scientific concepts to non-scientific audiences can ...
The purpose of this capstone is to identify rhetoric in public-facing science communication, and to ...
We argue that the rhetoric of science occupies an important niche in contemporary science studies. A...
This investigation compares how COVID-19 vaccination supporters and refusers make use of rhetorical ...
The paper identifies ten types of arguments that are found to run through time when scientist-writer...
The nature of popular science discourse in recent decades has acquired a convincing function, while ...
Our work aims to make the arguments underlying a scientific controversy more clear and more understa...
Rhetoric, as the theory and practice of the discursive means of human influence, and science, as the...
The Science Communication Challenge explores and discusses the whys – as distinct from the hows – of...
This thesis project examines how scientific authority is produced through rhetorical practices inste...
Differences in viewpoints between science and society, like in for example the HPV-vaccination debat...
The communication of scientific knowledge is traditionally oriented towards objective truth and fact...
As a totality, the contributions to this issue demonstrate that examining the rhetoric of science fu...
from a “rhetoric of conclusions ” to a social process of knowledge construction via scientific argum...