Advanced Comp Midterm

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Arete

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56 Terms
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Arete

an air of excellence, in art

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Logos

mind (appeal to logic)

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Ethos

authority

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Pathos

emotions

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an sit

if it is

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quid sit

what it is

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quale sit

what kind it is (quality)

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what are “Pleasure’s a sin, and sometimes sin’s a pleasure”; “despised if ugly: if she’s fair, betrayed” examples of?

Parallelism

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Metaphors for arguments

War, dance, stew, conversation, barn raising, exploration, woodworking, cooking

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Rhetoric

effective or persuasive speech or writing

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Rhetor

someone who practices rhetoric

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Rhetorician

someone who practices or theorizes about rhetoric

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Argument

the presentation of your ideas (or a disagreement between two people)

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Quadrivium/Scientific Arts

Astronomy, Math, Geometry, and Music

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Trivium/Humanities

Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric

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Who were the Sophists?

Aristotle’s/Plato’s enemies, charged for education, traveled around. They are where the negative definition of rhetoric/argument came from

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Chronos

time you can count

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Kairos

the quality of time/time within your relationship/within the argument for it to be the ‘right time’

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What is the heuristic of the 5 Canons?

1. Invention 2. Arrangement 3. Style 4. Memory 5. Delivery

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Intrinsic

Invention of an argument

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Extrinsic

Facts/Testimony (external sources)

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Isocrates

said that students should not be taught the creative activity of writing as if it was an ordered art

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Eikos

probability: “What is the degree of belief I will be awarded?” (somewhere between certainty and chance)

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What logical proof is ordered: Major premise > minor premise (as many as you want) > conclusion? (Ex. “all dolphins are mammals>mammals have kidneys> dolphins have kidneys”)

Deduction

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Which proof leaves out one of the logical steps? (ex. Jeff Bezos is greedy, therefore; he is unhappy; leaves out the major premise: all greedy people are unhappy)

Enthymemes

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Which logical proof goes from the specific to the universal (ex. God provides for the birds; therefore, he will provide for us)?

Inductive

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what types of examples are often used in rhetoric?

historical and fictional

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Maxims

sayings that many in the culture hold to be true

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Signs

Evidence of something. (But some signs are just stereotypes.) Ex. a fever is a sign of sickness

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Examples from similarity

If two game shows were rigged, they will all be rigged (from the book, not lecture)

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Examples from the contrary

“nobody died when Clinton lied.” to contrast with Bush’s lies, which killed people (from the book, not lecture)

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what is the semiotic triangle

model of how linguistic symbols relate to the objects they represent

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what are the 3 parts of the semiotic triangle?

the expression (signifier), the affection of the spirit (signified) and the primary substance (object)

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What are the 4 points of stasis?

  1. Conjecture (Does even X exist in order to be considered?)

  2. Definition (How should X be defined?)

  3. Quality (How serious is X?)

  4. Policy (Should there be some specific procedure for X?)

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What are the points of refutation?

uncertainty, incredibility, impossibility, lack of consistency, impropriety, and/or inconvenience

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What was Lyceum?

Aristotle’s school in athens

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What was the Academy?

Plato’s school

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Focus of Socrates?

Socrates' philosophy examines how we should live—saying the unexamined life is not worth living

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Who taught whom (Aristotle, Socrates, Plato)

Socrates>Plato>Aristotle

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who was Gorgias?

the guy who wrote Helen’s encomium

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what school of thought did Gorgias ascribe to?

he was a sophist and itinerant

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Isocrates goals were what?

The aim of Isocrates' education was to develop the abilities of students to think clearly, communicate persuasively and act effectively

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What is a heuristic?

an “aid to discovery”

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Who is attributed with the invention of “commonplaces and probabilities”

older sophists

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Who is the contributor of enthymemes, examples, signs, and maxims?

Aristotle

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Who’s credited with the invention of stasis theory?

Hermagoras of Temnos

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Conjecture, Degree, and Possibility

Commonplaces

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What is a commonplace?

A statement that regularly circulates within members of the community

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Topic

A procedure that generates arguments

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What is conjecture?

Whether a thing has (or not) occurred and will (or not) occur

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What is degree?

Whether a thing is greater or smaller then another thing

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What is possibility?

What is (and is not) possible

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Major premise

a statement assumed true at the beginning of a discussion

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minor premise

a premise that refers to a particular

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conclusion

the logical end of the major + minor premise

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Who is credited with maxims, enthymemes, inductive reasoning, deductive reasoning, examples, and analogies?

Aristotle

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