The Science of Rhetoric: An Introduction to the Laws of Effective Discourse (1877)Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1999 - 318 sider |
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Side 19
... Thought Separable . - After show- ing that thought is antecedent to expression , Pro- fessor Whitney says : " Language , then , is the spoken means whereby thought is communicated , and it is only that . Language is not thought , nor is ...
... Thought Separable . - After show- ing that thought is antecedent to expression , Pro- fessor Whitney says : " Language , then , is the spoken means whereby thought is communicated , and it is only that . Language is not thought , nor is ...
Side 20
... thought would be awkward , feeble , and indistinct , without the dress , the apparatus , which is afforded by language . Our denial of the identity of thought with its expression does not com- pel us to abate one jot or tittle of the ...
... thought would be awkward , feeble , and indistinct , without the dress , the apparatus , which is afforded by language . Our denial of the identity of thought with its expression does not com- pel us to abate one jot or tittle of the ...
Side 21
... thought , or thought itself . Leibnitz was the first to distinguish between symbolical and intuitive conceptions . When our notion of an object consists of a clear insight into all its essential attributes , it is intuitive . When , on ...
... thought , or thought itself . Leibnitz was the first to distinguish between symbolical and intuitive conceptions . When our notion of an object consists of a clear insight into all its essential attributes , it is intuitive . When , on ...
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abstract according action argument associated attention becomes called cause character circumstances classes clear common complex composition conception condition connection consider contrast definition depends direct discourse distinct divided division economy effect elements emotion English established example exercises experience explained exposition expression fact feeling figures force give given Grammar Hence Hill idea illustration important includes interest interpreting power Introduction kind language laws less lines Logic meaning mental metaphor Method mind mode nature necessary notion object once particular person plain poetry possess possible present principle probability produce progress proper proposition prove qualities reader reason reference regarded relation represent requires resemblance result Rhetoric says sense sentence simile sound speak style succession suggest things thought tion true truth unity universal variety whole words writer