Thanks everyone for the feedback!
I'm gonna take an epistemology approach for this speech. Since my audience is a small group of junior/senior college students in an upper division course that has given speeches on very liberal/nonconservative views it wouldn't be right to group them with the older ideals/practices of Christianity. Most have been raised to be Christian while a few have come out and stated that they transitioned from one sect to a different sect of Christianity in college.
Focusing on epistemology, logical fallacies, and how you can be taken advantage of in the real world both in their professional and personal life if a degree of skepticism isn't applied seems best for the given situation.
I'm gonna take an epistemology approach for this speech. Since my audience is a small group of junior/senior college students in an upper division course that has given speeches on very liberal/nonconservative views it wouldn't be right to group them with the older ideals/practices of Christianity. Most have been raised to be Christian while a few have come out and stated that they transitioned from one sect to a different sect of Christianity in college.
Focusing on epistemology, logical fallacies, and how you can be taken advantage of in the real world both in their professional and personal life if a degree of skepticism isn't applied seems best for the given situation.