I.A. Richards defines rhetoric as the study of misunderstandings and their remedies. I argue in this paper that A Common Word Between Us and You (ACW) - a rhetorical letter coauthored by H.R.H Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad and 38 Muslim scholars - shares Richards\u27 definition as its end and anchors his theory in practice. ACW is an attempt to avoid misunderstandings and to allow for understandings between Christians and Muslims about two of their common Scriptural commandments: love of God and love of neighbor. In Richards\u27 call for a new rhetoric, he asserts that the core of rhetoric must be about how to use language and that words and their meaning must be studied to develop a strategy that seeks exposition over persuasion if remedies ...
Classical rhetoric which originated from the times of ancient scholars has now developed rapidly i...
At a moment in which religious diversity is ever-increasing in the United States and more than three...
I come to the questions posed by this volume from a somewhat different background than one might exp...
I.A. Richards defines rhetoric as the study of misunderstandings and their remedies. I argue in this...
It is the Bible\u27s claim to be the inspired word of God. The message from the Scriptures has persu...
‘A common word between us and you’: observations on the (mis)uses of Koranic exegesis in interreligi...
In October 2007, 138 Muslim scholars signed a document entitled “A Common Word between Us and You” (...
I. A. Richards (most easily recognized as the "father " of New Criticism, but a true inter...
On September 13, 2006, Pope Benedict XVI addressed an audience at the University of Regensburgon the...
Initially acknowledged as leading to a revitalized rhetoric, I. A. Richards' contributions now are n...
This article examines the functioning of rhetoric in public discourse, in particular a rhetoric that...
The tekhnē of spoken discourse is a critical tool for particular communications and is a substantial...
This is a paper entitled “The Methods of Meanings in Saḥifa al-Sajjadiyah: an Analytical Rhetorical ...
Interactions across faith and worldview difference are becoming increasingly common in many communit...
The paper is highly concerned about decoding the Quranic dialogues by the way used by Grace in his f...
Classical rhetoric which originated from the times of ancient scholars has now developed rapidly i...
At a moment in which religious diversity is ever-increasing in the United States and more than three...
I come to the questions posed by this volume from a somewhat different background than one might exp...
I.A. Richards defines rhetoric as the study of misunderstandings and their remedies. I argue in this...
It is the Bible\u27s claim to be the inspired word of God. The message from the Scriptures has persu...
‘A common word between us and you’: observations on the (mis)uses of Koranic exegesis in interreligi...
In October 2007, 138 Muslim scholars signed a document entitled “A Common Word between Us and You” (...
I. A. Richards (most easily recognized as the "father " of New Criticism, but a true inter...
On September 13, 2006, Pope Benedict XVI addressed an audience at the University of Regensburgon the...
Initially acknowledged as leading to a revitalized rhetoric, I. A. Richards' contributions now are n...
This article examines the functioning of rhetoric in public discourse, in particular a rhetoric that...
The tekhnē of spoken discourse is a critical tool for particular communications and is a substantial...
This is a paper entitled “The Methods of Meanings in Saḥifa al-Sajjadiyah: an Analytical Rhetorical ...
Interactions across faith and worldview difference are becoming increasingly common in many communit...
The paper is highly concerned about decoding the Quranic dialogues by the way used by Grace in his f...
Classical rhetoric which originated from the times of ancient scholars has now developed rapidly i...
At a moment in which religious diversity is ever-increasing in the United States and more than three...
I come to the questions posed by this volume from a somewhat different background than one might exp...