Historical Studies of Rhetoric and RhetoriciansRaymond Floyd Howes Cornell University Press, 1961 - 446 pagina's |
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Pagina 48
... truth , and he who knows the truth will always know best how to discover the resemblance of the truth.7 71 The rhetoric of Tisias , then , is deficient in two respects . First , it is not even effective , for it is not quick at ...
... truth , and he who knows the truth will always know best how to discover the resemblance of the truth.7 71 The rhetoric of Tisias , then , is deficient in two respects . First , it is not even effective , for it is not quick at ...
Pagina 49
... truth of what he is going to say . " This cannot be in- terpreted as an injunction to speak the truth at all times . It is rather to know the truth in order ( a ) to be persuasive by presenting to the audience something which at least ...
... truth of what he is going to say . " This cannot be in- terpreted as an injunction to speak the truth at all times . It is rather to know the truth in order ( a ) to be persuasive by presenting to the audience something which at least ...
Pagina 60
... Truth , we note a wide divergence . Plato held that the rhetorician must know the Truth , be- cause probability was engendered by a likeness to Truth . Here Plato seems hardly consistent with himself , for a public so depraved as Plato ...
... Truth , we note a wide divergence . Plato held that the rhetorician must know the Truth , be- cause probability was engendered by a likeness to Truth . Here Plato seems hardly consistent with himself , for a public so depraved as Plato ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Field of Rhetoric Hoyt H Hudson | 3 |
Plato and Aristotle on Rhetoric and Rhetoricians | 19 |
Classical Rhetoric and the Mediaeval Theory of Preaching | 71 |
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