Studies in Rhetoric and Public Speaking in Honor of James Albert WinansAlexander Magnus Drummond Century Company, 1925 - 297 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 95
Página 7
... speaker , virtue would be unconsciously acquired . The controversy over the relation of virtue to eloquence runs through the history of rhetoric , and may be viewed as a technical question in that field . The attitude of sophists toward ...
... speaker , virtue would be unconsciously acquired . The controversy over the relation of virtue to eloquence runs through the history of rhetoric , and may be viewed as a technical question in that field . The attitude of sophists toward ...
Página 10
... speaker should be able to set forth the arguments on either side . His practice of having his stu- dents argue upon both sides of certain general themes may have been responsible for the charge against him , recorded by Aristotle , that ...
... speaker should be able to set forth the arguments on either side . His practice of having his stu- dents argue upon both sides of certain general themes may have been responsible for the charge against him , recorded by Aristotle , that ...
Página 11
... speakers a certain copiousness and elegance . Grammar was also given attention , and Protagoras is recognized as the first to introduce the subject into his curriculum . It has been remarked that the level attained by Greek literature ...
... speakers a certain copiousness and elegance . Grammar was also given attention , and Protagoras is recognized as the first to introduce the subject into his curriculum . It has been remarked that the level attained by Greek literature ...
Página 13
... speaker would be constantly praising virtue and censur- ing vice , and in so doing could hardly avoid entertaining certain ethical theories , Gorgias never announced himself as a teacher of virtue . He agreed with Isocrates that one who ...
... speaker would be constantly praising virtue and censur- ing vice , and in so doing could hardly avoid entertaining certain ethical theories , Gorgias never announced himself as a teacher of virtue . He agreed with Isocrates that one who ...
Página 15
... speaker tends to remain constant . " The Sophists were wealthy ; the Sophists were powerful ; the Sophists were dazzling , rhetorical , and not profound . Interrogate human nature - above all , the nature of philosophers- and ask what ...
... speaker tends to remain constant . " The Sophists were wealthy ; the Sophists were powerful ; the Sophists were dazzling , rhetorical , and not profound . Interrogate human nature - above all , the nature of philosophers- and ask what ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Studies in Rhetoric and Public Speaking: In Honor of James Albert Winans Alexander Magnus Drummond Vista de fragmentos - 1962 |
Studies in Rhetoric and Public Speaking: In Honor of James Albert Winans Alexander Magnus Drummond Vista de fragmentos - 1962 |
Términos y frases comunes
argument Aristotle Aristotle's Athenian audience Bacon's speeches believe Ben Jonson Burke Burke's cause child Cicero common conception defect dialectic discourse discussion distinction elocution eloquence Emerson emotional English enthymeme essay ethics Euthydemus focus of attention Francis Bacon Gomperz Gorgias hearers Hippias Hippias Minor History inhibitory ideas interest intonation Isocrates Jacques de Vitry Journals knowledge language laws lectures Letters literary criticism literature London Lord matter means melody ment method mind moral nature never orator oratory Parliament passage personality persuasion Phædrus philosopher phonetics phrase Plato political popular practice preacher preaching principles Professor Protagoras public speaking Quincey Quincey's Quintilian Ralph Waldo Emerson rhetoric rhetoricians S. R. Gardiner says sense sentence sermon Socrates sophists soul sounds speaker Spedding statesman stuttering style syllogism teachers teaching theme theory things thought tion true truth virtue voice Webster words writing York