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Title: History of Rhetoric


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History of Rhetoric
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OldDeadGreeks
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Rhetoric and Oratory
  • the art of swaying an audience by eloquent
    speech. In ancient Greece and Rome oratory was
    included under the term rhetoric, which meant the
    art of composing as well as delivering a speech.
    Oratory first appeared in the law courts of
    Athens and soon became important in all areas of
    life. It was taught by the Sophists. The Ten
    Attic Orators (listed by Alexandrine critics)
    were Antiphon, Andocides, Lysias, Isocrates,
    Isaeus, Aeschines, Demosthenes, Lycurgus,
    Hyperides, and Dinarchus. Classic Rome's great
    orators were Cato the Elder, Mark Antony, and
    Cicero.

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  • The theory of rhetoric was discussed by Aristotle
    and Quintilian and three main classes of oratory
    were later designated by classical rhetoricians
    (a) deliberativeto persuade an audience (such as
    a legislature) to approve or disapprove a matter
    of public policy (b) forensicto achieve (as in
    a trial) condemnation or approval for a person's
    actions (c) epideictic "display rhetoric" used
    on ceremonial occasions. Rhetoric was included in
    the medieval liberal arts curriculum. In
    subsequent centuries oratory was utilized in
    three main areas of public lifepolitics,
    religion, and law. During the Middle Ages, the
    Renaissance, and the Reformation, oratory was
    generally confined to the church, which produced
    such soul-searing orators as Savanorola, Martin
    Luther, John Calvin, and John Knox.

6
  • Classical Rhetoric The eloquence that Nestor,
    Odysseus, and Achilles display in Homer's Iliad
    led many Greeks to look upon Homer as the father
    of oratory. The establishment of democratic
    institutions in Athens in 510 BC imposed on all
    citizens the necessity of public service, making
    skill in oratory essential hence a group of
    teachers arose known as Sophists, who endeavored
    to make men better speakers by rules of art.
    Protagoras, the first of the Sophists, made a
    study of language and taught his pupils how to
    make the weaker cause appear the stronger.

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  • The actual founder of rhetoric as a science is
    said to be Corax of Syracuse (fl. about 465 BC),
    who defined rhetoric as the "artificer of
    persuasion" and composed the first handbook on
    the art of rhetoric. Later masters of rhetoric
    were Corax's pupil Tisias (fl. 5th cent. BC),
    also of Syracuse Gorgias of Leontini, who went
    to Athens in 427 BC and Thrasymachus of
    Chalcedon (fl. 5th cent. BC), who also taught at
    Athens. Antiphon (480?-411 BC), the first of the
    so-called Ten Attic Orators, was also the first
    to combine the theory and practice of rhetoric,
    and with Isocrates, the great teacher of oratory
    in the 4th century BC, the art of rhetoric was
    broadened to become a cultural study, a
    philosophy with a practical purpose. Plato
    satirized the more technical approach to
    rhetoric, with its emphasis on persuasion rather
    than truth, in his Gorgias, and in the Phaedrus
    he discussed the principles constituting the
    essence of the rhetorical art.

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  • Aristotle, in his Rhetoric, defined the function
    of rhetoric as being, not that of persuasion, but
    rather that of "discovering all the available
    means of persuasion," thereby emphasizing the
    winning of an argument by persuasive marshaling
    of truth, rather than the swaying of an audience
    by an appeal to their emotions. He regarded
    rhetoric as the counterpart, or sister art, of
    logic. The instructors in formal rhetoric in Rome
    were at first Greek, and the great masters of
    theoretical and practical rhetoric, Cicero and
    Quintilian, were both influenced by Greek models.

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  • Cicero wrote several treatises on the theory and
    practice of rhetoric, the most important being On
    the Orator Quintilian's famous Institutio
    Oratoria still retains its value as a thorough
    treatment of the principles of rhetoric and the
    nature of ideal eloquence. Scholastic
    declamations of the early empire are found in the
    extant suasorioe and controversioe of the
    rhetorician Seneca, the former belonging to
    deliberative rhetoric, the latter dealing with
    legal issues and presenting forensic rhetoric.
    During the first four centuries of the Roman
    Empire, rhetoric continued to be taught by
    teachers who were called Sophists, the term by
    this time used as an academic title.

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  • Protagoras, the first of the Sophists, made a
    study of language and taught his pupils how to
    make the weaker cause appear the stronger. The
    actual founder of rhetoric as a science is said
    to be Corax of Syracuse (fl. about 465 BC), who
    defined rhetoric as the "artificer of persuasion"
    and composed the first handbook on the art of
    rhetoric. Later masters of rhetoric were Corax's
    pupil Tisias (fl. 5th cent. BC), also of
    Syracuse Gorgias of Leontini, who went to Athens
    in 427 BC and Thrasymachus of Chalcedon (fl. 5th
    cent. BC), who also taught at Athens. Antiphon
    (480?-411 BC), the first of the so-called Ten
    Attic Orators, was also the first to combine the
    theory and practice of rhetoric, and with
    Isocrates, the great teacher of oratory in the
    4th century BC, the art of rhetoric was broadened
    to become a cultural study, a philosophy with a
    practical purpose.

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"KAKOU KORAKOS KAKON OONRhetoric the Story of
Corax vs. Tisias
  • The Scene "Corax and his pupil Tisias were
    reputedly the first Sophists. Like many young men
    with an appetite for worldly success, Tisias
    sought training from Corax in the hope of being
    able to sue his way to wealth and influence.
    Wishing to make sure he was not duped by his
    teacher, Tisias contracted to pay Corax only
    after he had actually won a law suit. On this
    condition his training commenced and soon enough
    was over. But Tisias became complacent. Years
    went by and Tisias brought no suits against
    anyone. Corax had been willing to wait to be
    paid, but not forever, so he brought a suit
    against Tisias to recover his fee" --
    Britannica.com

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  • Tisias Your Honors, I stand before you today in
    humility of spirit and purity of motive. I ask
    only that you listen patiently and judge rightly
    in issuing your verdict.
  • Your Honors, I charge Corax for failing to teach
    me well the art of Rhetoric. The proof of this
    charge is here before us today. For if I should
    lose my case, it will surely prove that I was not
    taught Rhetoric very well. And this being the
    case I should NOT have to pay the tuition. For no
    one should have to pay for services that weren't
    rendered according to what was promised.
  • On the other hand, if I win the case, it shows
    that I had enough sense and talent to figure out
    the art of Rhetoric out on my own, despite the
    negligence of my instructor. But even this is not
    necessary to my case. For a ruling against Corax,
    is a ruling for me. And a ruling for me means I
    do not have to pay tuition. In either case, then,
    I should NOT have to pay tuition.  

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  • Corax  Your Honors, I, too, stand humbly before
    you. I, too, recognize, in years far more
    experienced than that of my adversary, your
    outstanding record of prudent and just decision
    making on behalf of those whose cause is just. We
    are indeed fortunate to gain a hearing before
    you. This, then, is my case.
  • I have given Tisias the very best education in
    rhetoric of which I am capable, on the condition
    that he would at some point in his career pay my
    tuition. This he has not done. Now, if you rule
    against me -- that is if Tisias does in fact win
    his case -- it serves to show that I taught him
    Rhetoric well, in which case he should be
    required to pay my tuition. If, however, Tisias
    does not win his case, that would show him to be
    a poor, or rather bad, student. (We already know
    he is poor.) Those who are wise well know that a
    teacher is not to be faulted if, in discharging
    his services well and faithfully, the student is
    simply too stupid or too lazy (or too both) to
    take advantage of those services, expertly
    rendered.
  • But even this is unnecessary to my case. For a
    ruling against Tisias is a ruling in favor of me.
    Such a ruling would, of course, mean that Tisias
    must pay my tuition. In either case, then, my
    tuition should be paid.

15
The Decision "KAKOU KORAKOS KAKON OON"
  • Translation "From a bad crow, a bad egg." Or,
    "When a mischievous bird of prey lays an egg, the
    egg too is mischievous."
  • The verdict was actually a play on words Corax
    means "crow and Tisias means "eggs
  • The case was, in effect, thrown out of court.

16
Modern Version
  • The following argument reworks the traditional
    sophist's argument for buying lessons in rhetoric
    ("You should buy my lessons so that you can
    evaluate my argument that you should buy my
    lessons") by developing the infinite regress
    implicit in recursive consultation.

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  • Medieval and Renaissance Rhetoric Rhetoric
    constituted one of the subjects of the trivium,
    or three preliminary subjects of the seven
    liberal arts taught at the universities, the
    other two being grammar and logic. The chief
    medieval authorities on rhetoric were three Roman
    scholars of the 5th, 6th, and 7th centuries
    Martianus Capella (fl. late 4th cent. and early
    5th cent.), author of an encyclopedia of the
    seven liberal arts (arithmetic, astronomy,
    geometry, and music, in conjunction with grammar,
    logic, and rhetoric) Flavius Magnus Aurelius
    Cassiodorus, historian and founder of
    monasteries, famed especially for his
    Institutiones Divinarum et Humanarum Lectionum,
    the second book of which contains an account of
    the seven liberal arts and Isidore of Seville, a
    Spanish archbishop who compiled an encyclopedic
    work setting forth the erudition of the ancient
    world.

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  • During the Renaissance, the study of rhetoric was
    again based on the works of such writers of
    classical antiquity as Aristotle, Cicero, and
    Quintilian. A number of contemporary
    dissertations were produced, among them the Art
    of Rhetorique (1553) by the English statesman and
    writer Thomas Wilson (1525?-81), the Art or Craft
    of Rhetoryke by the English schoolmaster Leonard
    Cox (fl. 16th cent.), and treatises by Pierre de
    Courcelles (fl. 16th cent.) and André de
    Tonquelin (fl. 16th cent.), both French
    rhetoricians. Rhetoric was a prescribed subject
    in colleges and universities, public disputations
    and competitive exercises keeping the practice
    long alive.

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  • In the first half of the 20th century, a revival
    of the study of formal rhetoric, encouraged
    largely by the exponents of the linguistic
    science known as semantics, occurred throughout
    the English-speaking countries of the world.
    Among the modern educators and philosophers who
    made notable contributions to the study of
    rhetoric were the British literary critic I. A.
    Richards and the American literary critics
    Kenneth Duva Burke (1897-1993) and John Crowe
    Ransom.

21
  • Modern Rhetoric In the early 18th century,
    rhetoric declined in importance, although more on
    its theoretical than on its practical side, since
    the political arena and the debating platform
    continued to furnish numerous opportunities for
    effective oratory. For the succeeding
    half-century, the art of rhetoric had
    increasingly fewer exponents. The Lectures on
    Rhetoric (1783) by the Scottish clergyman Hugh
    Blair (1718-1800) achieved considerable
    popularity in the late 18th and early 19th
    centuries, as did the Philosophy of Rhetoric
    (1776) by the Scottish theologian George Campbell
    (1719-96) and the Elements of Rhetoric (1828) by
    the British logician Richard Whately (1787-
    1863).

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  • Old Dead Greeks, Part Two
  • Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle

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  • The Sophists were men whose responsibility it was
    to train and educate the sons of Athenian
    citizens. There were no formal school as we know
    them today. Instead, these were peripatetic
    schools, meaning that the instructor would walk
    with students and talk with them for a fee, of
    course. The Sophists taught the skills (sophia)
    of rhetoric and oratory. Both of these arts were
    essential for the education of the Athenian
    citizenry. After all, it was the sons of the
    citizens who would eventually find themselves
    debating important issues in the Assembly and the
    Council of Five Hundred. Rhetoric can be
    described as the art of composition, while
    oratory was the art of public speaking.
  • The Sophists abandoned science, philosophy,
    mathematics and ethics. What they taught was the
    subtle art of persuasion. A Sophist was a person
    who could argue eloquently and could prove a
    position whether that position was correct or
    incorrect. In other words, what mattered was
    persuasion and not truth. The Sophists were also
    relativists. They believed that there was no such
    thing as a universal or absolute truth, valid at
    all times. According to Protagoras (c.485-c.411
    B.C.), "Man is the measure of all things."
    Everything is relative and there are no values
    because man, individual man, is the measure of
    all things. Nothing is good or bad since
    everything depends on the individual. Gorgias of
    Leontini (c.485-c.380 B.C.), who visited Athens
    in 427, was a well-paid teacher of rhetoric and
    famous for his saying that a man could not know
    anything. And if he could, he could not describe
    it and if he could describe it, no one would
    understand him.

24
  • The Sophistic movement of the fifth century B.C.
    has been the subject of much discussion and there
    is no single view about their significance.
    Plato's treatment of the Sophists in his late
    dialogue, the Sophist, is hardly flattering. He
    does not treat them as real seekers after truth
    but as men whose only concern was making money
    and teaching their students success in argument
    by whatever means. Aristotle said that a Sophist
    was "one who made money by sham wisdom."
  • At their very best, the Sophists challenged the
    accepted values of the fifth century. They wanted
    the freedom to sweep away old conventions as a
    way of finding a better understanding of the
    universe, the gods and man. The Sophists have
    been compared with the philosophes of the 18th
    century Enlightenment who also used criticism and
    reason to wipe out anything they deemed was
    contrary to human reason. Regardless of what we
    think of the Sophists as a group or individually,
    they certainly did have the cumulative effect of
    further degrading a mythical understanding of the
    universe and of man.

25
Socrates From the ranks of the Sophists came
SOCRATES (c.469-399 B.C.), perhaps the most noble
and wisest Athenian to have ever lived.
  • Socrates was that he was remarkable for living
    the life he preached. Taking no fees, Socrates
    started and dominated an argument wherever the
    young and intelligent would listen, and people
    asked his advice on matters of practical conduct
    and educational problems.
  • Socrates was not an attractive man -- he was
    snub-nosed, prematurely bald, and overweight.
    But, he was strong in body and the intellectual
    master of every one with whom he came into
    contact. The Athenian youth flocked to his side
    as he walked the paths of the agora. They clung
    to his every word and gesture. He was not a
    Sophist himself, but a philosopher, a lover of
    wisdom.
  • In 399 B.C., Socrates was charged with impiety by
    a jury of five hundred of his fellow citizens.
    His most famous student, Plato, tells us, that he
    was charged "as an evil-doer and curious person,
    searching into things under the earth and above
    the heavens and making the worse appear the
    better cause, and teaching all this to others."
    He was convicted to death by a margin of six
    votes. Oddly enough, the jury offered Socrates
    the chance to pay a small fine for his impiety.
    He rejected it. He also rejected the pleas of
    Plato and other students who had a boat waiting
    for him at Piraeus that would take him to
    freedom. But Socrates refused to break the law.
    What kind of citizen would he be if he refused to
    accept the judgment of the jury? No citizen at
    all. He spent his last days with his friends
    before he drank the fatal dose of hemlock.

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Plato Socrates wrote nothing himself. What we
know of him comes from the writings of two of his
closest friends, Xenophon and Plato.
  • Our knowledge of Socrates comes to us from
    numerous dialogues which Plato wrote after 399.
    In nearly every dialogue and there are more
    than thirty that we know about Socrates is the
    main speaker. The style of the Plato's dialogue
    is important it is the Socratic style that he
    employs throughout. A Socratic dialogue takes the
    form of question-answer, question-answer,
    question-answer. It is a dialectical style as
    well. Socrates would argue both sides of a
    question in order to arrive at a conclusion. Then
    that conclusion is argued against another
    assumption and so on. Perhaps it is not that
    difficult to understand why Socrates was
    considered a gadfly!
  • There is a reason why Socrates employed this
    style, as well as why Plato recorded his
    experience with Socrates in the form of a
    dialogue. Socrates taught Plato a great many
    things, but one of the things Plato more or less
    discovered on his own was that mankind is born
    with knowledge. That is, knowledge is present in
    the human mind at birth. It is not so much that
    we "learn" things in our daily experience, but
    that we "recollect" them. In other words, this
    knowledge is already there. This may explain why
    Socrates did not give his students answers, but
    only questions. His job was not to teach truth
    but to show his students how they could "pull"
    truth out of their own minds (it is for this
    reason that Socrates often considered himself a
    midwife in the labor of knowledge). And this is
    the point of the dialogues. For only in
    conversation, only in dialogue, can truth and
    wisdom come to the surface.
  • Plato's greatest and most enduring work was his
    lengthy dialogue, The Republic. This dialogue has
    often been regarded as Plato's blueprint for a
    future society of perfection. I do not accept
    this opinion. Instead, I would like to suggest
    that The Republic is not a blueprint for a future
    society, but rather, is a dialogue which
    discusses the education necessary to produce such
    a society. It is an education of a strange sort
    he called it paideia. Nearly impossible to
    translate into modern idiom, paideia refers to
    the process whereby the physical, mental and
    spiritual development of the individual is of
    paramount importance. It is the education of the
    total individual.

27
  • The Republic discusses a number of topics
    including the nature of justice, statesmanship,
    ethics and the nature of politics. It is in The
    Republic that Plato suggests that democracy was
    little more than a "charming form of government."
    And this he is writing less than one hundred
    years after the brilliant age of Periclean
    democracy. So much for democracy. After all, it
    was Athenian democracy that convicted Socrates.
    For Plato, the citizens are the least desirable
    participants in government. Instead, a
    philosopher-king or guardian should hold the
    reigns of power. An aristocracy if you will an
    aristocracy of the very best the best of the
    aristoi.
  • Plato's Republic also embodies one of the
    clearest expressions of his theory of knowledge.
    In The Republic, Plato asks what is knowledge?
    what is illusion? what is reality? how do we
    know? what makes a thing, a thing? what can we
    know? These are epistemological questions that
    is, they are questions about knowledge itself. He
    distinguishes between the reality presented to us
    by our senses sight, touch, taste, sound and
    smell and the essence or Form of that reality.
    In other words, reality is always changing
    knowledge of reality is individual, it is
    particular, it is knowledge only to the
    individual knower, it is not universal.
  • Building upon the wisdom of Socrates and
    Parmenides, Plato argued that reality is known
    only through the mind. There is a higher world,
    independent of the world we may experience
    through our senses. Because the senses may
    deceive us, it is necessary that this higher
    world exist, a world of Ideas or Forms -- of what
    is unchanging, absolute and universal. In other
    words, although there may be something from the
    phenomenal world which we consider beautiful or
    good or just, Plato postulates that there is a
    higher unchanging reality of the beautiful,
    goodness or justice. To live in accordance with
    these universal standards is the good life -- to
    grasp the Forms is to grasp ultimate truth.
  • The unphilosophical man that is, all of us is
    at the mercy of sense impressions and
    unfortunately, our sense impressions oftentimes
    fail us. Our senses deceive us. But because we
    trust our senses, we are like prisoners in a cave
    we mistake shadows on a wall for reality. This
    is the central argument of Plato's ALLEGORY OF
    THE CAVE which appears in Book VII of The
    Republic.

28
Plato's most famous student was ARISTOTLE
(384-322 B.C.).
  • At the age of eighteen, Aristotle became the
    student at the Academy of Plato (who was then
    sixty years of age). Aristotle also started his
    own school, the Lyceum in 335 B.C. It too was
    closed by Justinian in A.D. 529. Aristotle was a
    "polymath" he knew a great deal about nearly
    everything. Very little of Aristotle's writings
    remain extant. But his students recorded nearly
    everything he discussed at the Lyceum. In fact,
    the books to which Aristotle's name is attributed
    are really little more than student notebooks.
    This may account for the fact that Aristotle's
    philosophy is one of the more difficult to
    digest. Regardless, Aristotle lectured on
    astronomy, physics, logic, aesthetics, music,
    drama, tragedy, poetry, zoology, ethics and
    politics. The one field in which he did not excel
    was mathematics. Plato, on the other hand, was a
    master of geometry.

29
  • For four years, Aristotle served as the teacher
    of a thirteen year old Alexander, son of Philip
    of Macedon.  In 334, he returned to Athens and
    established his school of philosophy in a set of
    buildings called the Lyceum (from a name for
    Apollo, the shepherd).  The beautiful grounds
    and covered walkways were conducive to leisurely
    walking discussions, so the students were known
    as peripatoi (covered walkways).
  • First, we must point out that Aristotle was as
    much a scientist as a philosopher.  He was
    endlessly fascinated with nature, and went a long
    way towards classifying the plants and animals of
    Greece.  He was equally interested in studying
    the anatomies of animals and their behavior in
    the wild.
  • Aristotle also pretty much invented modern
    logic.  Except for its symbolic form, it is
    essentially the same today.

30
  • Aristotle's rhetoric has had an enormous
    influence on the development of the art of
    rhetoric. Not only authors writing in the
    peripatetic tradition, but also the famous Roman
    teachers of rhetoric, such as Cicero and
    Quintilian, frequently used elements stemming
    from the Aristotelian doctrine. Nevertheless,
    these authors were neither interested in an
    authentic interpretation of the Aristotelian
    works nor in the philosophical sources and
    backgrounds of the vocabulary that Aristotle had
    introduced into rhetorical theory. Thus, for two
    millennia the interpretation of Aristotelian
    rhetoric has become a matter of the history of
    rhetoric, not of philosophy.

31
  • His theory of rhetorical arguments, for example,
    is only one further application of his general
    doctrine of the sullogismos, which also forms the
    basis of dialectic, logic and his theory of
    demonstration. Another example is the concept of
    emotions though emotions are one of the most
    important topics in the Aristotelian ethics, he
    nowhere offers such an illuminating account of
    single emotions as in the Rhetoric. Finally, it
    is the Rhetoric too which informs us about the
    cognitive features of language and style.
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