
handle: 11104/0254532
The author shows how important was the rhetorical alternative for Plato's constitution of theoretical philosophy. The second part describes the decline of classical rhetoric from the Greek most influential discourse to the 'zero point' around 1900. Third part is dedicated to Perelman and the 'Rhetorical Turn', treated as return to Aristotle. The last part confronts Aristotle with Perelman's understanding of Aristotelian rhetoric, and asks, if the New Rhetoric really returned to Aristotle?
The Rhetoric of Aristotle, The New Rhetoric, Chaim Perelman, Rhetoric as philosophy, Rhetorical Turn
The Rhetoric of Aristotle, The New Rhetoric, Chaim Perelman, Rhetoric as philosophy, Rhetorical Turn
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