Aristotle's Rhetoric : an art of character /
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Author / Creator: | Garver, Eugene. |
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Imprint: | Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1994. |
Description: | xii, 325 p. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2385508 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- Introdcution
- Aristotle'sRhetoricand the Professionalization of Virtue
- I. Aristotle'sRhetoric: Between Craft and Practical Wisdom Aristotle's Project: A civic, Practical Art of Rhetoric Guiding vs. Given Ends From Internal/External Ends toEnergeia/Kinesis Rhetoric andPhronesis Civic vs. Professional Arts
- II. The Kinds of Rhetoric The Plurality of Practical Discourse and the Diversity of Goods Plurality, Function, and the Three Kinfs of Rhetoric Plurality, Diversity, and the Incommensurablility From Guiding Ends to Species
- III. Rhetorical Topics and Practical Reason Topics and the Marriage of Politics and Dialectic Deliberative Rhetoric:Rhetoric Epideictic Rhetoric: Rhetoric Topics and Practical Reason
- IV. Deliberative Rationality and the Emotions Corrupting and Enabling Emotions The Place of the Emotions in Rhetorical Arugment Love and Anger,EuniaandThymos Aristotle's Definition of Emotion: How Emotions Modify Judgment Pleasure, Pain, and Good Practical Decisions The Political Function of Emotion The Emotions, Good Action, and the Good Life
- V. Why Reasoning Persuades Arguing and Persuading Arguing and Persuading: Ethos and Trust Logical Forma and Rhetorical Forms How Examples Persuade How Enthymemes Persuade Rhetorical Persuasion and Practical Reason
- VI. Making Discourse Ethical: Can I Be Too Rational? The Problem and the Evidence Character and Rhetorical Invention Why Rhetorical Needs Ethos Ethos and Trust: SPeaker and Audience Artful Ethos and Real Ethos How Maxims Make Discourse Ethical Rhetoric, Cleverness, andPhronesis
- VII. How to Tell the Rhetorician from the Sophist, and Which One to Bet On EnergeiaandPraxis The Internal Ends of Art and Virtue The Art and Virtue of Truth-telling The Moral Point of View and the Rhetorical Point of View The Moral Ambiguity of Rhetoric, and the Moral Ambiguity of Morality
- VIII. Aristotle'sRhetoricand the History of Prudence
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index to Passages from Aristotle
- General Index