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| Christopher W. Tindale |
| © 2004 | 224 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc |
| Instructors | ||||
| Complimentary Review Copy | ||||
| Individual Purchasers | ||||
| Paperback | ISBN: | 9781412904001 | $64.00 | |
| Hardcover | ISBN: | 9781412903998 | $104.00 | |
| 1. Introduction: A Rhetorical Turn for Argumentation | |
| Alice's Predicament | |
| Models of Argument | |
| Beyond the Logical | |
| Beyond the Dialectical | |
| Rhetoric and Rhetorical Argumentation | |
| The Path Ahead | |
| 2. 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 | |
| 3. ...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 | |
| Conclusion | |
| 4. Rhetorical Contexts and the Dialogical | |
| Introduction: Dialogue and Dialogues | |
| Bakhtin's Terminology | |
| Dialogic Argument | |
| Reflections on a Bakhtinian Model | |
| Examples | |
| Conclusion | |
| 5. Martians, Philosophers, and Reasonable People: The Construction of Objective Standards | |
| Introduction | |
| How Martians Reason | |
| The Martian Standard and the Problems of Evaluation | |
| Bakhtin's Superaddressee | |
| Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca's Universal Audience | |
| Conclusion | |
| 6. 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 | |
| 7. 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 Argument | |
| Acceptability | |
| Conclusion | |
| 8. Rhetorical Conclusions | |
| From Protagoras to Bakhtin | |
| The Rhetorical Audience | |
| Goals of Rhetorical Argumentation | |
| Conclusions Without Conclusiveness |
| Christopher W. Tindale |
| © 2004 | 224 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc |
| ISBN: 9781412904001 | Paperback | Suggested Retail Price: $64.00 | Bookstore Price: $51.20 |
| ISBN: 9781412903998 | Hardcover | Suggested Retail Price: $104.00 | Bookstore Price: $83.20 |
The study of argumentation has primarily focused on logical and dialectical approaches, with minimal attention given to the rhetorical facets of argument. Rhetorical Argumentation: Principles of Theory and Practice approaches argumentation from a rhetorical point of view and demonstrates how logical and dialectical considerations depend on the rhetorical features of the argumentative situation. Throughout this text, author Christopher W. Tindale identifies how argumentation as a communicative practice can best be understood by its rhetorical features.
Rhetorical Argumentation uniquely presents argumentation through the idea of an invitational rhetoric by encouraging readers to think about the ways in which they encounter arguments. The book explores the processes involved in the argumentative exchanges between arguers and audiences-thus, emphasizing the collaborative nature of the arguer-audience relationship in the argumentative situation. That is, argument is presented not as a set of ideas imposed upon a passive audience, but rather as a dynamic exchange wherein the audience is involved in self-persuasion.
Key Features:
Explores the ancient foundations of rhetoric, from Aristotle to the relatively contemporary works of Perelman and Olbrechts-Tytecta, Toulmin, and Bakhtin
Includes numerous examples illustrating the ways in which the reasoning within arguments involves the audience from premise through to conclusion
Presents the idea of "dialogism" drawn from the theories of Mikhail Bakhtin to create a more dynamic and interactive sense of the argumentative context
Examines current theory as well as the historical relationship between argument and rhetoric
Provides detailed discussions of topics such as nature of the dialogical, rhetorical context, audiences, and standards of appraisal.
Rhetorical Argumentation is designed to provide advanced undergraduate and graduate students with a clear understanding of the rhetorical view of argumentation and how it can be effective in contemporary society. The book is an ideal text for courses in Communication, Rhetoric, Argumentation, Informal Logic, Critical Thinking, and Conflict Resolution.
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