Readings in SpeechHaig A. Bosmajian Harper & Row, 1965 - 384 pagina's |
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Pagina 39
... listener would were the listener doing the talking . Can you see these beliefs at work in the examples given above ? In short , what you understand by any word or statement may not be what someone else intends to say . In a way , this ...
... listener would were the listener doing the talking . Can you see these beliefs at work in the examples given above ? In short , what you understand by any word or statement may not be what someone else intends to say . In a way , this ...
Pagina 184
... listeners to that state in which they would wish the bourgeois eradicated . As Aristotle put it , " the angry man wishes the object of his anger to suffer in return ; hatred wishes its object not to exist . " In his narration , Marx ...
... listeners to that state in which they would wish the bourgeois eradicated . As Aristotle put it , " the angry man wishes the object of his anger to suffer in return ; hatred wishes its object not to exist . " In his narration , Marx ...
Pagina 201
... listener had at least a fighting chance of being unaffected . In short , we may conclude that consciousness , and the ... listeners ' freedom of choice . He is , in fact , attempting to broaden it . If , how- ever , he goes so far in his ...
... listener had at least a fighting chance of being unaffected . In short , we may conclude that consciousness , and the ... listeners ' freedom of choice . He is , in fact , attempting to broaden it . If , how- ever , he goes so far in his ...
Inhoudsopgave
ARISTOTLE | 3 |
WILLIAM NORWOOD BRIGANCE | 14 |
DANIEL KATZ | 20 |
Copyright | |
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able action agitator American answer appeal argue argument asked attempt audience authority become believe called cause character Christian communication concerned condition considered Court danger death democratic devices discussion doctrine effect emotional ethical evidence example existence experience expression fact fallacy fear feelings force give given hear human ideas important individual interest judge justice kind language least less listeners living Marx masses matter means meeting methods mind moral nature never objections opinion peace person persuasion political position possible practice present principle proof propaganda question reason reference result Rhetoric rule seems sense side social society speaker speaking speech stand statement successful talk Terminiello things thought tion true truth understand whole writing York