Elements of Rhetoric, Comprising an Analysis of the Laws of Moral Evidence and of Persuasion: With Rules for Argumentative Composition and ElocutionSouthern Illinois University Press, 1963 - Всего страниц: 479 |
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Стр. 75
... established as it now is , we should have been justified in not giving at once full credit to some report , resting on or- dinary evidence , of an occurrence so antecedently improba- ble as that of a stone's falling from the sky . But ...
... established as it now is , we should have been justified in not giving at once full credit to some report , resting on or- dinary evidence , of an occurrence so antecedently improba- ble as that of a stone's falling from the sky . But ...
Стр. 139
... established by miracles , all would allow to be , considered by itself , in the absence of strong direct testi- mony , utterly insufficient to establish the Conclusion . On the other hand , miracles considered abstractedly , as repre ...
... established by miracles , all would allow to be , considered by itself , in the absence of strong direct testi- mony , utterly insufficient to establish the Conclusion . On the other hand , miracles considered abstractedly , as repre ...
Стр. 162
... established , which , though in itself capable of being made evident to the hum- blest capacity , yet has been long and generally overlooked , and to which established prejudices are violently opposed , it will sometimes happen that to ...
... established , which , though in itself capable of being made evident to the hum- blest capacity , yet has been long and generally overlooked , and to which established prejudices are violently opposed , it will sometimes happen that to ...
Содержание
FOREWORD BY DAVID POTTER | ix |
I | xvii |
PREFACE | xxxiii |
Авторские права | |
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
absurd accordingly admitted Analogy appear apply argu arguments Aristotle attention believe Bishop Butler called Cause cerned chap character Christian Cicero circumstance common composition conclusion consequently considered course degree Deliberative Assembly delivery discourse distinct doctrine Edinburgh Review effect Elocution eloquence employed Enthymeme established evidence excite experience expression fact faculty psychology favour feelings habit hearers I. A. Richards imply important infer instance introduced Jews judgment kind language less Logic matter means ment Metaphor mind mode moral natural object observed occasion opinion Orator passions perhaps persons Pleonasm practice premises present Presumption principles probable produce proof proposition prove question racter reader reason Refutation regarded religion remarks respect Rhetoric Richard Whately rules sense sentence sentiments sophisms Sophistical Refutation speaker speaking style sufficient supposed testimony thing thought Thucydides tical tion Treatise truth tural Whately Whately's witness words writers
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