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Rhetorical argumentation : principles of theory and practice /

By encouraging readers to think about the ways they encounter arguments, this text presents argumentation through the idea of an invitational rhetoric.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Tindale, Christopher W. (Christopher William)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Thousand Oaks, Calif. : Sage Publications, ©2004.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • A Rhetorical Turn for Argumentation
  • Alice's Predicament
  • Models of Argument
  • Beyond the Logical
  • Beyond the Dialectical
  • Rhetoric and Rhetorical Argumentation
  • The Path Ahead
  • Argument as Rhetorical ...
  • Introduction: Rhetoric's Origin
  • Argument's Origin
  • Rhetoric and Argument in Fifth- and Fourth-Century Greece
  • Sophistic Argument
  • Sophistic Argument and the Notion of "Fallacy"
  • Rhetoric as Invitational
  • ... And Rhetoric as Argument
  • Introduction: Rhetorical Figures and Arguments
  • Reboul on Figures and Arguments
  • Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca
  • Fahnestock's Figural Logic
  • Figures as Arguments
  • Rhetorical Contexts and the Dialogical
  • Introduction: Dialogue and Dialogues
  • Bakhtin's Terminology
  • Dialogic Argument
  • Reflections on a Bakhtinian Model
  • Martians, Philosophers, and Reasonable People: The Construction of Objectivity
  • How Martians Reason
  • The Martian Standard and the Problems of Evaluation
  • Bakhtin's Superaddressee
  • Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca's Universal Audience
  • Developing the Universal Audience
  • Introduction: Why the Universal Audience Fails
  • Reading the Universal Audience: Two Views
  • Reappraising the Universal Audience
  • Applying the Idea of a Universal Audience
  • The Truth About Orangutans: Conflicting Criteria of Premise Adequacy
  • Introduction: Deep Disagreements Between Logic and Rhetoric
  • Hamblin's Orangutans
  • The Rhetoric of Philosophy: Metaphors as Arguments
  • Acceptability
  • Rhetorical Conclusions
  • From Protagoras to Bakhtin.