On the Concepts of Logical Fallacy and Logical Error
... Although the concept of logical error depends on the understanding of many ambiguous general logical and epistemological terms it is a useful concept. Moreover, paradoxically, this difficulty turns out to be the fundamental strength of the concept of logical error for it is a philosophical concept a ...
... Although the concept of logical error depends on the understanding of many ambiguous general logical and epistemological terms it is a useful concept. Moreover, paradoxically, this difficulty turns out to be the fundamental strength of the concept of logical error for it is a philosophical concept a ...
Modern arrangement
... most general sense, a text is a narrative when its parts are episodes or events (whether externaI or psychological). Histories, biographies, news stories, movies, and novels all fall under this broad classification. The default arrangement strategy for a narrative is chronological sequence, but the ...
... most general sense, a text is a narrative when its parts are episodes or events (whether externaI or psychological). Histories, biographies, news stories, movies, and novels all fall under this broad classification. The default arrangement strategy for a narrative is chronological sequence, but the ...
El conocimiento de los valores - Retos de la Retórica
... argumentatio contains the obtaining and the use of exempla (examples) taken from history, literature and real life, this issue being another root of cultural rhetoric (Albaladejo, 2013; Chico Rico, 2014). It implies that the orator looks for examples and he or she exercises his or her search by exam ...
... argumentatio contains the obtaining and the use of exempla (examples) taken from history, literature and real life, this issue being another root of cultural rhetoric (Albaladejo, 2013; Chico Rico, 2014). It implies that the orator looks for examples and he or she exercises his or her search by exam ...
ethical and political qualities of epideictic rhetoric in ancient greece
... point of view of the use of the language as a means of communication. The scope of the usage of speech is connected with the common wealth according to which public life and its political and ethical conditions are moulded. The sense of purpose on the other hand lies in the duty of the orator to per ...
... point of view of the use of the language as a means of communication. The scope of the usage of speech is connected with the common wealth according to which public life and its political and ethical conditions are moulded. The sense of purpose on the other hand lies in the duty of the orator to per ...
Chapter Four - Macmillan Learning
... Did you use sound evidence and reasoning? Was the content of your message accurate? Did you avoid manipulating the emotional sensitivity of your audience?* ...
... Did you use sound evidence and reasoning? Was the content of your message accurate? Did you avoid manipulating the emotional sensitivity of your audience?* ...
modus operandi
... emphasizes this point by saying that «the moral idea is the first and the last priority by which the others are strengthened and completed»5. Nowadays, the study of Rhetoric is divided into two main epistemic areas: its role in Literary production regarding all aesthetic and poetic aspects and its r ...
... emphasizes this point by saying that «the moral idea is the first and the last priority by which the others are strengthened and completed»5. Nowadays, the study of Rhetoric is divided into two main epistemic areas: its role in Literary production regarding all aesthetic and poetic aspects and its r ...
Laurent Pernot: La Rhétorique dans l`Antiquité (Le livre de poche
... with the influence of rhetoric on literature and includes examples mainly from poetry (Ovid) and philosophy (consolations). This is where Pernot ends his history of ancient rhetoric, and where I felt somewhat disappointed. Would that Pernot had continued his exposition to include the two and a half ...
... with the influence of rhetoric on literature and includes examples mainly from poetry (Ovid) and philosophy (consolations). This is where Pernot ends his history of ancient rhetoric, and where I felt somewhat disappointed. Would that Pernot had continued his exposition to include the two and a half ...
Persuasive Basanos - CSSR / SCÉR – Canadian Society for the
... employed “assessments of character, reputation, and probability, cast in terms which appealed to the knowledge and values which the judges, as ordinary citizens, possessed” (61).3 Speakers won favour from juries not by applying extrinsic proof against objective rules, but by evaluating their charact ...
... employed “assessments of character, reputation, and probability, cast in terms which appealed to the knowledge and values which the judges, as ordinary citizens, possessed” (61).3 Speakers won favour from juries not by applying extrinsic proof against objective rules, but by evaluating their charact ...
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC)
... Infused with philosophy (which Romans considered Greek and effeminate) Supposed addressed to Cicero’s brother, it takes the form of a Platonic dialogue with Crassus and Antonius the main speakers Held to be Cicero’s masterpiece for its humane and elevated treatment of rhetoric Cicero considers the q ...
... Infused with philosophy (which Romans considered Greek and effeminate) Supposed addressed to Cicero’s brother, it takes the form of a Platonic dialogue with Crassus and Antonius the main speakers Held to be Cicero’s masterpiece for its humane and elevated treatment of rhetoric Cicero considers the q ...
Final Exam
... a) Is an attempt to persuade through the emotional use of language and thus has no logical value b) Is an attempt to persuade through critical thinking and thus is a useful skill c) Is an attempt to persuade through any means available and thus logical argument is one way to provide good rhetoric d) ...
... a) Is an attempt to persuade through the emotional use of language and thus has no logical value b) Is an attempt to persuade through critical thinking and thus is a useful skill c) Is an attempt to persuade through any means available and thus logical argument is one way to provide good rhetoric d) ...
argument
... clearly which kind of a claim we have before we can properly evaluate any argument for it! • Thus, please note we are taking a position against the subjectivist and saying that even moral judgments can be analyzed by the principles of critical thinking. ...
... clearly which kind of a claim we have before we can properly evaluate any argument for it! • Thus, please note we are taking a position against the subjectivist and saying that even moral judgments can be analyzed by the principles of critical thinking. ...
Slide 1
... course. The Sophists taught the skills (sophia) of rhetoric and oratory. Both of these arts were essential for the education of the Athenian citizenry. After all, it was the sons of the citizens who would eventually find themselves debating important issues in the Assembly and the Council of Five Hu ...
... course. The Sophists taught the skills (sophia) of rhetoric and oratory. Both of these arts were essential for the education of the Athenian citizenry. After all, it was the sons of the citizens who would eventually find themselves debating important issues in the Assembly and the Council of Five Hu ...
Classical Rhetoric in Baroque Music - KMH-DiVA
... Rhetoric is the art or the discipline that deals with the use of discourse, either spoken or written, to inform or persuade or motivate an audience, whether that audience is made up of one person or a group of person. Broadly defined in that way, rhetoric would seem to comprehend every kind of verba ...
... Rhetoric is the art or the discipline that deals with the use of discourse, either spoken or written, to inform or persuade or motivate an audience, whether that audience is made up of one person or a group of person. Broadly defined in that way, rhetoric would seem to comprehend every kind of verba ...
notes - public.asu.edu
... the time. This is to me a source of wonder. The field of rhetoric provides an especially satisfying account of communicative processes and possibilities. As a mode of inquiry, rhetoric is expansive in scope, supple enough to be applied in the study of various media and multiple contexts of interacti ...
... the time. This is to me a source of wonder. The field of rhetoric provides an especially satisfying account of communicative processes and possibilities. As a mode of inquiry, rhetoric is expansive in scope, supple enough to be applied in the study of various media and multiple contexts of interacti ...
Rhetoric and Technical Communication
... taught, hence their distrust of the sophists, who conflated rhetoric and wisdom. Plato’s dialogues ridicule the sophists, but sophists are worth our study. Leading sophists: Protagoras of Abdera (c. 480-411 BC) “man is the measure of all things.” Gorgias (483-378 BC) – key philosophy, nihilism (noth ...
... taught, hence their distrust of the sophists, who conflated rhetoric and wisdom. Plato’s dialogues ridicule the sophists, but sophists are worth our study. Leading sophists: Protagoras of Abdera (c. 480-411 BC) “man is the measure of all things.” Gorgias (483-378 BC) – key philosophy, nihilism (noth ...
Technique: Bandwagon
... winning side. The technique tends to obscure the ethics of the activity at the expense of victory: better to belong to the winning side than be too concerned with the rightness of the means to achieve it. The "4 out of 5 doctors recommend..." slogan uses both the bandwagon technique and the argument ...
... winning side. The technique tends to obscure the ethics of the activity at the expense of victory: better to belong to the winning side than be too concerned with the rightness of the means to achieve it. The "4 out of 5 doctors recommend..." slogan uses both the bandwagon technique and the argument ...
Rhetorical Triangle / S.O.A.P.S.Tone and D.I.D.L.S.
... Critical Reading Strategies To analyze any piece of writing -- any rhetoric -- it is essential to know the subject of the piece, the occasion for its being written, the audience for whom it is written, the purpose of the piece, and the actual speaker (may differ from the author). In other words, use ...
... Critical Reading Strategies To analyze any piece of writing -- any rhetoric -- it is essential to know the subject of the piece, the occasion for its being written, the audience for whom it is written, the purpose of the piece, and the actual speaker (may differ from the author). In other words, use ...
Rhetorical Analysis (Prewriting) - BYU Writing Center
... Next, determine the rhetorical tools Elizabeth uses to make her argument. Looking at the segment critically, notice that Elizabeth manages to logically connect the fact that she is a Queen with the responsibility to defend her realm. Queen Elizabeth ironically juxtaposes the fact that she is a feebl ...
... Next, determine the rhetorical tools Elizabeth uses to make her argument. Looking at the segment critically, notice that Elizabeth manages to logically connect the fact that she is a Queen with the responsibility to defend her realm. Queen Elizabeth ironically juxtaposes the fact that she is a feebl ...
Rhetoric Intro - HHCS
... • Appeals to pathos touch a nerve and compel people to not only listen, but to also take the next step and act in the world. ...
... • Appeals to pathos touch a nerve and compel people to not only listen, but to also take the next step and act in the world. ...
Rhetorical term glossary
... refutation A denial of the validity of an opposing argument. In order to sound reasonable, refutations often follow a concession that acknowledges that an opposing argument may be true or reasonable. Lou Gehrig refutes that his bad break is a cause for discouragement by saying that he has "an awful ...
... refutation A denial of the validity of an opposing argument. In order to sound reasonable, refutations often follow a concession that acknowledges that an opposing argument may be true or reasonable. Lou Gehrig refutes that his bad break is a cause for discouragement by saying that he has "an awful ...
In a rhetorical précis, you analyze both the content
... Sentence 4: Provide a description of the intended audience and the relationship the author establishes with the audience. ...
... Sentence 4: Provide a description of the intended audience and the relationship the author establishes with the audience. ...
Logos
... • Students would do well (yes, quite well) to use pathos and ethos when they construct their arguments. • I advise students not to mention logos in their analyses: logos is quite general and large and meaningless unless it is treated specifically. • Pathos and Ethos are little bitty and focused (and ...
... • Students would do well (yes, quite well) to use pathos and ethos when they construct their arguments. • I advise students not to mention logos in their analyses: logos is quite general and large and meaningless unless it is treated specifically. • Pathos and Ethos are little bitty and focused (and ...
Presumption and Burden of Proof: IADA Workshop
... Argumentation Studies Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation & Rhetoric (CRRAR) University of Windsor ...
... Argumentation Studies Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation & Rhetoric (CRRAR) University of Windsor ...
A Guide to Rhetoric for Fundraisers
... of Wisdom”. Their belief that wisdom and excellence could be taught stood in direct conflict with the Greeks’ view that wisdom and excellence were virtues, and therefore, could not be taught. Three notable figures in the Sophist movement are Protagora of Abdera (c. 480-411 B.C.), Gorgias and Isocrat ...
... of Wisdom”. Their belief that wisdom and excellence could be taught stood in direct conflict with the Greeks’ view that wisdom and excellence were virtues, and therefore, could not be taught. Three notable figures in the Sophist movement are Protagora of Abdera (c. 480-411 B.C.), Gorgias and Isocrat ...
Chaïm Perelman
Chaïm Perelman (20 May 1912, Warsaw – 22 January 1984, Brussels) was a Polish-born philosopher of law, who studied, taught, and lived most of his life in Brussels. He was among the most important argumentation theorists of the twentieth century. His chief work is the Traité de l'argumentation – la nouvelle rhétorique (1958), with Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca, translated into English as The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation, by John Wilkinson and Purcell Weaver (1969).