Aristotle's Rhetoric has three books: the first focuses on the speaker, the second in the relationship between the receiver and the speaker, and the third, in the speech . For Aristotle, Rhetoric has three main parts: inventio, and elocutio dispositio. In the Latin world comes to have five parts thanks to the work of authors such as Quintilian, Cicero and the anonymous Rhetorica ad Herennium .
Regarding the inventio, we can distinguish between "convince" (rationally) and the "thrill", but both aspects complement each other forever. It convinces through tests, which may be technical or extratécnicas. The former are essentially the enthymeme and example, the latter are contracts, codes, wills, witness statements, etc.. Aristotle (who focus on "technical evidence") said that the enthymeme is a syllogism which is implied probability of the premises:
Parents love their children
José José's father loves his children
In such sense, we say: "Parents often love their children, therefore, Joseph loves his." They note that the premise 2 is implied in the rhetorical argument. Note that does not use the premise "All parents love their children" because it would take the probabilistic side enthymeme.
Regarding the example, this is a test based on the principle of analogy and seeks to establish a kind of intertextual relationship between two particular cases. Verbigracia, "the fire as the reason appears in 'Letters' of César Moro, in the same manner as stated in 'Common Law' by André Breton, and so on."
Regarding the inventio, we can distinguish between "convince" (rationally) and the "thrill", but both aspects complement each other forever. It convinces through tests, which may be technical or extratécnicas. The former are essentially the enthymeme and example, the latter are contracts, codes, wills, witness statements, etc.. Aristotle (who focus on "technical evidence") said that the enthymeme is a syllogism which is implied probability of the premises:
Parents love their children
José José's father loves his children
In such sense, we say: "Parents often love their children, therefore, Joseph loves his." They note that the premise 2 is implied in the rhetorical argument. Note that does not use the premise "All parents love their children" because it would take the probabilistic side enthymeme.
Regarding the example, this is a test based on the principle of analogy and seeks to establish a kind of intertextual relationship between two particular cases. Verbigracia, "the fire as the reason appears in 'Letters' of César Moro, in the same manner as stated in 'Common Law' by André Breton, and so on."
As for the "thrill" is relevant to refer to the speaker's moral character and feelings (calm, hate, love, etc..) It produces in the spectators. Aristotle, in this case, a study of feelings and assigns a key role in the persuasion process.
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