Glossary

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*'''Rationalistic idealism''': the theory that a criterion of truth is not sensory but intelluctual and deductive (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
*'''Rationalistic idealism''': the theory that a criterion of truth is not sensory but intelluctual and deductive (see [["The New Rhetoric: A Theory of Practical Reasoning" by Chaïm Perelman]])
*'''Rediscovering''': the effects of analogy or isomorphism with current forms of knowledge that allow the perception of forgotten or obscured figures (See [[Foucault, Michel "What Is an Author?"]])
*'''Rediscovering''': the effects of analogy or isomorphism with current forms of knowledge that allow the perception of forgotten or obscured figures (See [[Foucault, Michel "What Is an Author?"]])
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*'''Replicability''': in research, the ability of others to yield the same or similar results as those in a completed study (see [[Rickly, Rebecca "Messy Contexts: Research as a Rhetorical Situation"]])
*'''Representamen''': the object that something, often a sign, represents, creating in the mind an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign (Peirce [[January 25 Class Notes]])
*'''Representamen''': the object that something, often a sign, represents, creating in the mind an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign (Peirce [[January 25 Class Notes]])
*'''Rhetoric''': (see [[Definitions of Rhetoric]])
*'''Rhetoric''': (see [[Definitions of Rhetoric]])
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== U-Z ==
== U-Z ==
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*'''Validity''': in research, the ability of data to answer the question being studied (see [[Rickly, Rebecca "Messy Contexts: Research as a Rhetorical Situation"]])
*'''Verbal units''': words, phrases, and clauses that help identify how an author orients a reader to other phenomena (see [[Blythe, Stuart "Coding Digital Texts and Multimedia"]])
*'''Verbal units''': words, phrases, and clauses that help identify how an author orients a reader to other phenomena (see [[Blythe, Stuart "Coding Digital Texts and Multimedia"]])
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*'''Warrant''': in the [[Toulmin Model of Argument]], an often implicit assumption that supports the inference of the claim from the data/evidence (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])
*'''Warrant''': in the [[Toulmin Model of Argument]], an often implicit assumption that supports the inference of the claim from the data/evidence (see [[Toulmin, Stephen "The Layout of Arguments"]])

Revision as of 20:30, 14 April 2012

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