I hold rhetoric, thus characterized, to be a sort of foundational branch of the arts more generally, much as logic is a foundational branch of mathematics. — Pfhorrest
More accurately rhetoric is the skill - techne - of persuasion in contingent matters. E.g., shall we attack at dawn? Shall we build a wall or build ships? Of matter that could be one way or the other.logic and rhetoric — Pfhorrest
Rhetoric would be logic misapplied in the sense that it is argumentation intended to bypass objective empirical validation and instead plug directly into the various cognitive biases of humans. That is, all the standard kinds of "irrationalities", such as the recency effect or groupthink. — apokrisis
The “art” part in the “art of rhetoric” probably serves the same function as in “the art of building”, “the art of war”, “the art of the deal” which has less to do with the modern meaning of the word as it stands alone then with the more ancient meaning as in the Greek “techne” which rather means “skill”, but is still translated as “art”. — Congau
one could argue that we all use rhetoric whenever we try to persuade anyone of anything without thereby having any reasonable right to call ourselves artists. But I think it’s important to retain a difference between good art and bad art. If I draw a stickman on a scrap of paper I am strictly speaking an artist, although a horribly bad one. Art as such is nothing rare and special and we all engage in it whenever we do anything that is slightly creative, for example when we try to persuade. — Congau
Rhetoric a (usually auditory) taking-counsel-with leading to a decision concerning an action to be taken or not taken. — tim wood
Rhetoric is an art, sure. It's not foundational to art generally, though. If I enjoy some music, am I really a victim of rhetoric? — bert1
Hmmm, I guess in a broad way a lot of our creative activity involves rhetoric, including music. — Bitter Crank
I'm not sure if you took me to be saying that rhetoric is a kind of logic. I wasn't; I was separating them as different aspects of communication, "structure" and "presentation" basically....
...]I have some other stuff to say in response to the negative view of rhetoric you go on to state — Pfhorrest
Another thread about the merits or faults of rhetoric, rather than this thread which is just supposed to be about the relationship of rhetoric to art. — Pfhorrest
What does this mean? If rhetoric is about the arts of persuasion, then either side could be true. The question of truth goes to logic and its demonstrations. Should I apply for this job or that? Logic cannot tell me. It goes to rhetoric, even if self-applied, to persuade me as to the better course of action. That is, in brief, the true is not the business of rhetoric, the business of rhetoric is the better - or best.not necessarily rhetoric whose content is true. — Pfhorrest
What does this mean? If rhetoric is about the arts of persuasion, then either side could be true — tim wood
Should I apply for this job or that? Logic cannot tell me. It goes to rhetoric, even if self-applied, to persuade me as to the better course of action. That is, in brief, the true is not the business of rhetoric, the business of rhetoric is the better - or best. — tim wood
The bad thing is when rhetoric of this "artful" kind then gets applied back where it shouldn't be - where we are supposed to be rational thinkers making evidence-based claims. — apokrisis
His student Aristotle ... holding that because many people sadly do not think in perfectly rational ways, rhetorical appeals to emotion and character and such are often necessary to get such people to accept truths that they might otherwise irrationally reject. — Pfhorrest
In this analogy, the medicinal content of the pill is the logical, rational content of a speech-act, while the size, texture, and flavor of the pill is the rhetorical packaging and delivery of the speech-act. — Pfhorrest
I’m only saying it can also be used for good. — Pfhorrest
Just dryly hitting someone with a book of hard logic isn't going to effectively communicate anything to them. It has to be delivered in a way that will actually get through to them. — Pfhorrest
Logic is about demonstrating truths that are universally and necessarily so and cannot be otherwise. Rhetoric the contingent, that could either be or not be. — tim wood
But many people, even those who know something about rhetoric, still do not keep the distinction between them and their respective purposes in mind, and also confuse rhetoric with sophistry. That is, confuse the reputable and useful with the contemptible and hateful. — tim wood
If that were all that you claimed, there would be far less to discuss. That counts as the bleeding obvious. — apokrisis
I think I was ending up talking about that fit as well. Scientific ideas need to be communicated in their certain way - explicit logical theory, concrete objective measurements - to persuade their audience. That defines a good fit.
But rhetoric - in its ancient Aristotelean sense - is about powerful oratory. And to move crowds, you have to plug into ordinary human psychology. That would define its good fit. — apokrisis
So the big flip in Ancient Greece was in accepting the principle of a dialectical inquiry as the royal road to arriving at truth. That is what you really get from Plato as the reason to engage in something more ambitious than sophistry. — apokrisis
Leaving aside the "victim" language which again paints rhetoric as an entirely bad thing: yes in a way, if you enjoy some music, the musician has successfully used some broadly-speaking rhetorical device on you to successfully evoke that reaction in you. — Pfhorrest
In the ancient Aristotlean sense - where all information is oratory - rhetoric can be seen to render quantitative facts or logic as secondary. — Possibility
An excavation of metaphysical truth - in the age of quantum mechanics - necessarily involves rhetoric, not as an ‘art of persuasion’, but as a recognition of relativity or uncertainty in interpreting undeniable quantitative information as a statement of relevant philosophical truth. — Possibility
If you think that's bleeding obvious then I don't know why it seemed like you disagreed with that until now. — Pfhorrest
But if you're trying to convince the general populace of that same theory of reality -- same content, different audience -- you need to be aware that often they're not just going to zero in on your logic and facts and brush any rhetorical flourishes away as distractions. — Pfhorrest
But you were trying to contrast logic and rhetoric. And that then doesn’t work if you also want rhetoric to bridge the division of rational or scientific exposition and artistic or social audience connection. — apokrisis
I think that rhetoric does just boil down to that ancient emphasis on oratory as a practical life skill - the social art of speaking persuasively. — apokrisis
It sounds like you are confused about the way in which I'm contrasting logic and rhetoric. — Pfhorrest
Sure. The traditional meaning of rhetoric was about oratorical skill - persuasive public speaking. So it was about pragmatics - presentation - rather than syntax/semantics, the actual grammatically-structured and meaningful part of what was said.
We can do one without the other, but most often we are doing both simultaneously. — Pfhorrest
We can do pure applied logic, and just be doing abstract mathematics. (Empirical science is something else beyond mere logic and math). — Pfhorrest
That relationship between rhetoric and art was the main point of this thread. — Pfhorrest
In a preliterate society - not to be confused with an illiterate society - spoken language was the repository of all knowledge. Rhetoric, then, no mere social art. It's been said that the state of the state then could be assessed by the state of the official language. — tim wood
Modern rhetoric as sophistry? All that says is that you have not grasped that some - many, most - issues are not soluble in logic. — tim wood
Rhetoric can only be understood by first recognizing that it does not reduce to anything else but itself. Not logic, not psychology, but itself.
"Rhetoric may be defined as the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion." Rhetoric 1355b25 — tim wood
So I don't find your logic vs rhetoric dichotomy accurate as it leaves out the third thing of semantics. — apokrisis
What strikes me now is that logic as syntactic structure is a constraint that the audience - a community of thinkers - would want to impose on the speaker. A discipline to ensure something concrete and measurable, so potentially meaningful, just got claimed.
Rhetoric - as pragmatics - is the attempt by a speaker to constrain the audience in an inverse fashion. It boils down to loosening their determination to doubt by signalling all the ways they must be really already on the same page. A context that grounds the semantics is shared. This being so, there is no need to speak of x, y and z.
So that is how the game of communication gets played generally. The speaker is constrained by a set of grammatical habits. But an audience also needs to be on the same page in terms a semantic common ground. Otherwise a speech act can never touch bottom in terms of an endless capacity to doubt the semantic validity of everything that we hear said. — apokrisis
Have you said anything so far in response to my point that art relies on plugging into the inherent cognitive biases of humans? — apokrisis
I thought that was just you agreeing with my general thesis here, that rhetoric and the arts more generally both trade in the appeal to those kinds of things. — Pfhorrest
I would frame it more as "evoking feelings" than "plugging into biases" — Pfhorrest
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