Which properties are characteristic of the enthymeme in Aristotle's Rhetoric? There is no consensus on this point. The present discussion centres on three properties. 1. Is there always an implicit premise? (Answer: Above all, a pragmatic level and a logical level must be distinguished.) 2. Do the premises consist by definition of probabilities and signs? (Answer: No.). 3. Are all enthymemes reducible to a syllogistic form? (Answer: The literature pertaining to this question is dominated by a false dilemma: an enthymeme does not have either a topical or a syllogistic structure). In general, Aristotle's approach to the enthymeme in the Rhetoric appears to shift from argumentation theory to logic
Aristotle's Rhetoric is of ambivalent character. While reading it, we feel a certain vacillation bet...
Aristotle studies syllogistic argumentation in Sophistical Refutations and Prior Analytics. In the l...
The article discusses the problem of pisteis − the means of persuasion in Aristotle's theory of rhet...
This paper argues for a reinterpretation of Aristotle’s concept of an enthymeme and also his wider i...
Aristotle refers to enthymemes both in his Organon and Rhetoric. The comparison of the various passa...
In the second chapter of his Rhetoric (1357 a 1 ff.) Aristotle comes for the first time to deal with...
The theory of the enthymeme is already ambiguous in classical Greek and Latin texts. This logical-rh...
The study of enthymemes has always been regarded as important in logic, critical thinking, and rheto...
textIn this paper I explore the usefulness of nonmonotonic logics within the domain of enthymematic ...
The enthymeme has been a central component of rhetorical proof from early Greek philosophy to modern...
Today it is generally accepted that the main differences between the "Rhetoric to Alexander" and Ari...
Three "truth techniques" were invented simultaneously in Ancient Greece: "Science" to convey knowled...
In Rhetoric, Aristotle called the enthymeme the syllogism of persuasion. More recently, philosopher ...
AbstractIn traditional logic, an enthymeme is said to be an argument, or chain of argumentation, wit...
Expressing a widely-held view, David Hitchcock claims that "an enthymematic argument ... assumes at ...
Aristotle's Rhetoric is of ambivalent character. While reading it, we feel a certain vacillation bet...
Aristotle studies syllogistic argumentation in Sophistical Refutations and Prior Analytics. In the l...
The article discusses the problem of pisteis − the means of persuasion in Aristotle's theory of rhet...
This paper argues for a reinterpretation of Aristotle’s concept of an enthymeme and also his wider i...
Aristotle refers to enthymemes both in his Organon and Rhetoric. The comparison of the various passa...
In the second chapter of his Rhetoric (1357 a 1 ff.) Aristotle comes for the first time to deal with...
The theory of the enthymeme is already ambiguous in classical Greek and Latin texts. This logical-rh...
The study of enthymemes has always been regarded as important in logic, critical thinking, and rheto...
textIn this paper I explore the usefulness of nonmonotonic logics within the domain of enthymematic ...
The enthymeme has been a central component of rhetorical proof from early Greek philosophy to modern...
Today it is generally accepted that the main differences between the "Rhetoric to Alexander" and Ari...
Three "truth techniques" were invented simultaneously in Ancient Greece: "Science" to convey knowled...
In Rhetoric, Aristotle called the enthymeme the syllogism of persuasion. More recently, philosopher ...
AbstractIn traditional logic, an enthymeme is said to be an argument, or chain of argumentation, wit...
Expressing a widely-held view, David Hitchcock claims that "an enthymematic argument ... assumes at ...
Aristotle's Rhetoric is of ambivalent character. While reading it, we feel a certain vacillation bet...
Aristotle studies syllogistic argumentation in Sophistical Refutations and Prior Analytics. In the l...
The article discusses the problem of pisteis − the means of persuasion in Aristotle's theory of rhet...