Glossary

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*'''Aphorism''': a pithy observation that contains a general truth(see [[Foucault, Michel "What Is an Author?"]])
*'''Aphorism''': a pithy observation that contains a general truth(see [[Foucault, Michel "What Is an Author?"]])
*'''Apodictic philosophy''': something demonstrated therefore true (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
*'''Apodictic philosophy''': something demonstrated therefore true (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
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*'''Architectonic''': productive, a mode of learning rather than merely observation (see [[McKeon, Richard “The Uses of Rhetoric in a Technological Age: Architectonic Productive Arts”]]])
*'''Articulation:''': a connection or linking of parts to form a unity. (see [[Hea, Amy C. Kimme "Riding The Wave"]])
*'''Articulation:''': a connection or linking of parts to form a unity. (see [[Hea, Amy C. Kimme "Riding The Wave"]])
*'''Articulation Theory''': is well-suited to examinations of technology because it addresses a range of cultural concerns manifest in the design, development, production, circulation, and consumption of technologies. (see [[Hea, Amy C. Kimme "Riding The Wave"]])
*'''Articulation Theory''': is well-suited to examinations of technology because it addresses a range of cultural concerns manifest in the design, development, production, circulation, and consumption of technologies. (see [[Hea, Amy C. Kimme "Riding The Wave"]])
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*'''Modal Qualifiers''': terms such as "probably" and "presumably," which indicate an author's level of certainty (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])
*'''Modal Qualifiers''': terms such as "probably" and "presumably," which indicate an author's level of certainty (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])
*'''Monologism''': interpretation of a text without relation to other influencing texts (see [[Bakhtin, Mikhail "Toward a Methodology for the Human Sciences"]]
*'''Monologism''': interpretation of a text without relation to other influencing texts (see [[Bakhtin, Mikhail "Toward a Methodology for the Human Sciences"]]
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*'''Monotonic reasoning''': reasoning in which adding new information does not change the outcome (e.g., "Socrates has brown hair" does not change the outcome of the example syllogism "Socrates is a man; all men are mortal; therefore, Socrates is mortal") (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])
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*'''Node''': any object which is linked to another object (see [[Slatin, John M. "Reading Hypertext: Order and Coherence in a New Medium"]])
*'''Node''': any object which is linked to another object (see [[Slatin, John M. "Reading Hypertext: Order and Coherence in a New Medium"]])
*'''Nominalism''': the belief that universals are mere names without any reality (see [[“The Cultural Role of Rhetoric” by Richard Weaver]])
*'''Nominalism''': the belief that universals are mere names without any reality (see [[“The Cultural Role of Rhetoric” by Richard Weaver]])
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*'''Non-monotonic reasoning''': reasoning in which adding new information changes the outcome (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])
*'''Nonverbal Units''': help explore how something is communicated through physical phenomena (gestures, facial expressions) or aspects of speech (loudness, pitch, rate of speech) (see [[Blythe, Stuart "Coding Digital Texts and Multimedia"]])
*'''Nonverbal Units''': help explore how something is communicated through physical phenomena (gestures, facial expressions) or aspects of speech (loudness, pitch, rate of speech) (see [[Blythe, Stuart "Coding Digital Texts and Multimedia"]])
*'''Narrative paradigm''': [[Walter Fisher]]'s theory that all forms of communication are a type of storytelling and that all human experience evolves as a type of "narrative"; contrast to the "Rational World Paradigm" (see [[Fisher, Walter "Narration as a Human Communication Paradigm"]])
*'''Narrative paradigm''': [[Walter Fisher]]'s theory that all forms of communication are a type of storytelling and that all human experience evolves as a type of "narrative"; contrast to the "Rational World Paradigm" (see [[Fisher, Walter "Narration as a Human Communication Paradigm"]])

Revision as of 01:37, 17 April 2012

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