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Published byMaude Cross Modified over 9 years ago
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Brummett and Emig Readings
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Brummett
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Relationship between knowledge and discourse Depending on point of view, entail a conception of reality, knowledge, discourse, and the relationship among them
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Three views of rhetoric Methodological Rhetoric is a means to discovery of the truth, a conduit to knowledge Rhetoric leads people to realize the truth about an objective and unitary reality Rhetoric discovers a world waiting to be found
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There is one truth and it is out there Implications of this view for rhetoric Rhetoric has no subject matter of its own Rhetoric has not changed much since classical times
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Sociological Focuses on the role of rhetoric in the social sphere Leaves the role of rhetoric in mathematics and the sciences untouched (nonexistent) Divides reality into social and material realms
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Material reality and truth are absolute, but social reality is created in discourse Rhetoric has limited or no action in the material realm; a rock is a rock, and observation of it does not require rhetoric Social reality is plural and relative There are many truths on social issues and each of them may be true for the groups that espouse them.
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Ontological Rhetoric creates all of what there is to know Discourse does not merely discover a pre- existing truth Discourse creates realities rather than truths about realities
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Reality is a particular blend of the physical and the meaningful All of what people do is in some way rhetorically shaped and, in its turn, rhetorically influential on others Rhetoric as a discipline has a co-equal status with any other discipline
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Emig
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Inquiry vs. research why? Research implies empirical research
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Inquiry Paradigm Governing gaze An acknowledged, or conscious, set of assumptions Coherent theory or theories Allegiance to an explicit or tacit intellectual tradition Adequate methodology
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