Chaim PerelmanSIU Press, 7. nov. 2002 - 180 sider This accessible book examines the philosophical foundations of Chaim Perelman's rhetorical theory. In addition to offering a brief biography, it explores Perelman's deep philosophical commitments and his concern for the ways in which the details of actual texts realize those commitments. The authors show that Perelman still reigns supreme when it comes to the elucidation of actual texts. His is a micro-analysis of arguments, one that is endlessly suggestive of ways of analyzing texts at the level of the word and phrase, the arrangement of parts, and the structure of arguments. |
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Side x
... analysis, the legitimacy of law depends on the undistorted forms of public communica— tion and indirectly on the communicational infrastructure of the private sphere as well. This is the key to a proceduralist understanding of law ...
... analysis, the legitimacy of law depends on the undistorted forms of public communica— tion and indirectly on the communicational infrastructure of the private sphere as well. This is the key to a proceduralist understanding of law ...
Side 2
... analysis of several IogicaI para~ doxes and antinomies in law had shaken his faith in these doctrines, but his attachments to the orthodoxy ofhis age had not been completely severed. In a 1940 article he described resemblances between ...
... analysis of several IogicaI para~ doxes and antinomies in law had shaken his faith in these doctrines, but his attachments to the orthodoxy ofhis age had not been completely severed. In a 1940 article he described resemblances between ...
Side 5
... analysis of the idea ofjustice, a “confused notion,” as he would later call it. For centuries philosophers and politicians had wrangled incessantly over the varying meanings attached to the word “justice,” and no existing paradigm of ...
... analysis of the idea ofjustice, a “confused notion,” as he would later call it. For centuries philosophers and politicians had wrangled incessantly over the varying meanings attached to the word “justice,” and no existing paradigm of ...
Side 7
... analysis of the specimens of reasoning actually used by lawyers, philosophers, politicians, journalists, moralists, and others who try to “make a rule prevail” in situations where empirical evidence and formal logic cannot settle the ...
... analysis of the specimens of reasoning actually used by lawyers, philosophers, politicians, journalists, moralists, and others who try to “make a rule prevail” in situations where empirical evidence and formal logic cannot settle the ...
Side 14
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Indhold
1 | |
Philosophical Foundations | 13 |
A Theory of the Rhetorical Audience | 31 |
Arguing QuasiLogically | 43 |
Arguing from the Structure of Reality | 53 |
Arguments That Establish the Structureof Reality | 65 |
Rhetoric as a Technique and a Modeof Truth | 81 |
Arrangement as Persuasion | 99 |
The Figures as Argument | 115 |
Presence as Synergy | 135 |
Notes | 153 |
Bibliography | 157 |
Index | 165 |
Books in the Rhetoric in the Modern Era Series | 167 |
Back Cover | 168 |
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act~person analogy analysis argu Aristotle arrangement assertion asyndeton attitudinal audience’s Belgians believe Brussels Chaim Perelman chapter claim co~author concept conclusion Constitution create DARROW Descartes Descartes’s devices dialectic Diana discourse dissociation Douglas’s effect elements ence enthymeme epistrophe example existence exordium fact figure final first formal human hyperbole idea incompatibility issue justice Kenneth Burke Lincoln Lincoln—Douglas litotes logic mathematical means ment metaphor metonymy mode of truth moral nature ofhis Perel Perelman and Olbrechts Perelman and Olbrechts~Tyteca person persuasive Phaedrus philosophical phoros Plato ploce political polyptoton polysyndeton presence presumption principle public address quasi~logical arguments question rational reason Republicans rhetorical audience rhetorical reason role rule ofjustice scientific self~evidence self~referential semantic sense slave slavery social South speaker species speech structure of reality synecdoche techniques territory theme and phoros theory of knowledge things tion tropes Tyteca Union universal audience values voted wrong