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Aristotle and Confucius on Rhetoric and Truth: The Form and the Way

Autor Haixia Lan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 noi 2016
The current study argues that different cultures can coexist better today if we focus not only on what separates them but also on what connects them. To do so, the author discusses how both Aristotle and Confucius see rhetoric as a mode of thinking that is indispensable to the human understanding of the truths of things or dao-the-way, or, how both see the human understanding of the truths of things or dao-the-way as necessarily communal, open-ended, and discursive. Based on this similarity, the author aims to develop a more nuanced understanding of differences to help foster better cross-cultural communication. In making the argument, she critically examines two stereotyped views: that Aristotle’s concept of essence or truth is too static to be relevant to the rhetorical focus on the realm of human affairs and that Confucius’ concept of dao-the-way is too decentered to be compatible with the inferential/discursive thinking. In addition, the author relies primarily on the interpretations of the Analects by two 20th-century Chinese Confucians to supplement the overreliance on renderings of the Analects in recent comparative rhetorical scholarship. The study shows that we need an in-depth understanding of both the other and the self to comprehend the relation between the two.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781472487360
ISBN-10: 1472487362
Pagini: 238
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate

Notă biografică

Haixia W. Lan received her PhD in English from Purdue University with an emphasis on Rhetoric and Composition and Literary Theory. She works at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, teaching writing as a process of learning; theories of rhetorical invention; the grammar, politics, ethics of style; and comparative rhetoric. Her research is in all of these areas, and she is the academic director of 2+2 English degree program.

Cuprins

Introduction: Living the Form and Knowing the Way
    Similarities and Differences Rhetoric and the Other Rhetoric and Truth Rhetoric and Sophistry A Twofold Argument Translations of Works by Aristotle and Confucius
Chapter One: Aristotle and Rhetorical Invention: A Legacy of Probable Inquiry
    Episteme and Techne Sophistical Reasoning Dialectical Reasoning Both Sophistical and Dialectical Reasoning Classical Rhetoric Rhetorical Invention Today Conclusions
Chapter Two: Interpreting the Analects: The Need to Address Rhetorical Invention
    Confucius and Rhetoric
      Confucius as a Rhetorician Confucius on Rhetorical Invention
    Studies of Confucius’ Analects
      Religious and Philosophical Interpretations Literary Interpretations Rhetorical Interpretations
      Two Approaches Difficulties with Focusing Exclusively on Differences Importance of Studying Differences within Cultures
    Conclusions
Chapter Three: Rhetorical Probability: Form, Eikos, Tianming, and Rendao
    Form and Eikos in Aristotle:
      Truth, Form, and Logos Form, Logos, and Nous Form, Logos and Pa

Recenzii

"Without any doubt [Lan] manages to put the two great thinkers, Greek and Chinese, on one platform where a comparison is possible ... the value of this work is this very approach. We must try to find ways of communication even across such difficult gulfs. Lan manages to bridge these very different worlds."
- Matylda Amat Obryk, Heinrich-Heine-University, Germany, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017

Descriere

Readings of Aristotle’s and Confucius’ teachings reveal that both philosophers’ rhetorical thinking contain vital similarities which can help us understand cultural differences today. Much has been said about Aristotle’s definition of rhetoric as ‘the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion’ but few studies have focused on his depiction of rhetoric as ‘partly like dialectic, and partly like sophistical reasoning’. Yet, this Aristotelian conception of rhetoric sheds light on a similarity with Confucius’ teaching: both Confucius and Aristotle see the human understanding of the truths of things as necessarily having a dimension that is open-ended and discursive.