More’s discrimination is pathos as he expresses that all the women were married off and the men would win. Discrimination has played a big role in the utopian world and not to say also the real world. “Wives serve their husbands” (61), as it shows the powerlessness that the women have. It is to be seen today, many women need to serve their husband or else they are beaten or thrown out to the streets for not obeying the man of the house rules. The discrimination that lies with the women can be ratifying hurtful to where they can feel worthless for all the fallacies that are made upon women not being able to do specific things for being feminine. “Women, for the most part, deal in wool and flax, which suit best with their weakness, leaving the ruder trades to the men” (58). The power of women should be like men because the capability is there and it is being proven to many …show more content…
His logos claim to express the feeling about demonstrating some type of appreciate to their employee. Most people in the utopian world would “divid[ed] the day and night into twenty-four hours, appoint six of these for works; three of which are before dinner, and three after” (58). The author of the book is full of logos because it is expressing factual evidence on how the people work in that Utopian world. In the real world, this is the case also for the people who work long hours like 8 or 12 hours a day with lunch because most people are in a full-time position or part-time position. If a utopian world is a nice society, then is our real world to be considered a nice society? Because the labor might be pleasant but the discrimination between the men and the women