The Rhetoric of Blair, Campbell, and WhatelySIU Press, 1968 - 399 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 64
Página vii
... influential British rhetoricians , but when the supply of secondhand copies of these works dried up , students had to resort to their college libraries for copies of the primary texts . In order to make these works more accessible , the ...
... influential British rhetoricians , but when the supply of secondhand copies of these works dried up , students had to resort to their college libraries for copies of the primary texts . In order to make these works more accessible , the ...
Página 2
... influential teacher of rhetoric in his era . One of the key terms in the Rhetoric and a term which represents one of Aristotle's chief contributions to the development of " an art of rhetoric " was probability . Aristotle astutely ...
... influential teacher of rhetoric in his era . One of the key terms in the Rhetoric and a term which represents one of Aristotle's chief contributions to the development of " an art of rhetoric " was probability . Aristotle astutely ...
Página 6
... influential logic text and the companion rhetoric text by his ar- dent disciple , Omer Talon . The effects of this Ramistic dichotomy are re- flected in the titles of some of the most influential of the English vernacu- lar texts ...
... influential logic text and the companion rhetoric text by his ar- dent disciple , Omer Talon . The effects of this Ramistic dichotomy are re- flected in the titles of some of the most influential of the English vernacu- lar texts ...
Página 7
... influential . These include John Holmes's The Art of Rhetoric ( 1739 ) , John Lawson's Lectures Concerning Oratory ( 1752 ) , and John Ward's Systems of Oratory ( 1759 ) . The latter , which covers more than eight hundred pages , is ...
... influential . These include John Holmes's The Art of Rhetoric ( 1739 ) , John Lawson's Lectures Concerning Oratory ( 1752 ) , and John Ward's Systems of Oratory ( 1759 ) . The latter , which covers more than eight hundred pages , is ...
Página 9
... influenced the direction which rhetoric was to take during the later half of the eighteenth century . The writers who contributed the most elaborate theories describing man's mental and moral nature were John Locke , Francis Hutcheson ...
... influenced the direction which rhetoric was to take during the later half of the eighteenth century . The writers who contributed the most elaborate theories describing man's mental and moral nature were John Locke , Francis Hutcheson ...
Contenido
15 | |
Lecture II | 37 |
Lecture III | 47 |
Means of Improving in Eloquence | 128 |
GEORGE CAMPBELL | 139 |
Eloquence in the largest acceptation defined its more | 145 |
The Doctrine of the preceding Chapter defended | 167 |
Of the different sources of Evidence and the different | 174 |
Of the cause of that pleasure which we receive from | 238 |
The Foundations and Essential | 260 |
RICHARD WHATELY | 273 |
Introduction | 279 |
Of the Invention Arrangement | 296 |
Of the various use and order of the several kinds | 340 |
Of Elocution | 374 |
Artificial and Natural Methods Compared | 380 |
Of the Nature and Use of the scholastic art | 197 |
Of the Consideration which the Speaker ought to have | 205 |
Of the Consideration which the Speaker ought to have | 223 |
Considerations arising from the Differences between | 388 |
Practical deductions from the foregoing views | 396 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Rhetoric of Blair, Campbell, and Whately James L. Golden,Edward P. J. Corbett Sin vista previa disponible - 1990 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Smith admitted Aeneid ancient appear applied argument Aristotle attention beauty Blair called Campbell cause character Cicero circumstances common composition conclusion consequence considered contrary criticism David Hume Dean Swift degree delivery Demosthenes discourse distinct doctrine effect Elocution eloquence emotion employed evidence experience expression fact favour feeling former Francis Bacon genius give hath hearers Hence Henry Home Hudibras Hugh Blair human ideas imagination important instance James Boswell judgment kind language Lectures Logic manner matter means mind moral nature never object observed occasion opinion orator oratory particular passions pathetic perhaps persons persuasion philosophical pleasure precision Presumption principles probability produce proof proper propositions public speaking question Quintilian reason regard relation remarked render respect Rhetoric Richard Whately ridicule rules sense sentiments speaker species Speech style sublime supposed syllogism taste term testimony things thought Thucydides tion treatise tropes truth Whately words writing