Glossary

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== A ==
== A ==
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*'''Aesthetics''': study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty (see [["The New Rhetoric" by Chaim Perelman]])
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*'''Aesthetics''': study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
*'''Adumbration:''' prefiguration: the act of providing vague advance indications; representing beforehand. (Burke [[January 27 Class Notes]])  
*'''Adumbration:''' prefiguration: the act of providing vague advance indications; representing beforehand. (Burke [[January 27 Class Notes]])  
*'''Affective Fallacy''': Wimsatt and Berdsley claimed that evaluating literature by the way it affects the reader is uselessly subjective.  Again, literature should be evaluated through its use of language, not outside factors (see [["How to Read a Page" by I. A. Richards]])
*'''Affective Fallacy''': Wimsatt and Berdsley claimed that evaluating literature by the way it affects the reader is uselessly subjective.  Again, literature should be evaluated through its use of language, not outside factors (see [["How to Read a Page" by I. A. Richards]])
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*'''Antistrophos''': counterpart, companion (see [["On Distinctions between Classical and Modern Rhetoric" by Andrea A. Lunsford and Lisa S. Ede]])
*'''Antistrophos''': counterpart, companion (see [["On Distinctions between Classical and Modern Rhetoric" by Andrea A. Lunsford and Lisa S. Ede]])
*'''Antithetical''': being in direct and unequivocal opposition (see [["Nature of the Linguistic Sign" by Ferdinand de Saussure]])
*'''Antithetical''': being in direct and unequivocal opposition (see [["Nature of the Linguistic Sign" by Ferdinand de Saussure]])
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*'''Antilogies''': contradiction in terms or ideas (see [["The New Rhetoric" by Chaim Perelman]])
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*'''Antilogies''': contradiction in terms or ideas (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
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*'''Aphorism''': a pithy observation that contains a general truth(see [["What is an Author?" by Michel Foucault]])
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*'''Aphorism''': a pithy observation that contains a general truth(see [[Foucault, Michel "What Is an Author?"]])
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*'''Apodictic philosophy''': something demonstrated therefore true (see [["The New Rhetoric" by Chaim Perelman]])
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*'''Apodictic philosophy''': something demonstrated therefore true (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
*'''Axiological:''' of or relating to the study of values.  (Weaver [[February 15 Class Notes]])
*'''Axiological:''' of or relating to the study of values.  (Weaver [[February 15 Class Notes]])
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*'''Axiom''': self-evident truths that require no proof (see [["The New Rhetoric" by Chaim Perelman]])
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*'''Axiom''': self-evident truths that require no proof (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
== B ==
== B ==

Revision as of 21:29, 13 March 2012

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