Мобильная версия

Доступно журналов:

3 288

Доступно статей:

3 891 637

 

Скрыть метаданые

Автор Wreen, Michael J.
Дата выпуска 1997
dc.description This, the latest volume in The Douglas Walton Encyclopedia of Argumentation—well, it's starting to look like that, anyway—is primarily concerned with four purported fallacies that involve an appeal to emotion: ad populum, ad misericordiam, ad baculum, and ad hominem. In very rough outline, the layout of the book is this. After some preliminary remarks about the four fallacies in the first chapter, and some remarks about the theoretical framework he will be working with in the second, Walton devotes a chapter apiece to each of the four in the order indicated above. A seventh chapter focuses on “borderline cases,” in which more than one of the so-called fallacies is involved, and an eighth summarizes and refines the findings of earlier chapters. As is obvious, The Place of Emotion is well organized; and, as would be a safe inference for anyone acquainted with any of Walton's work, it is written in a readily accessible and unpretentious style: a plain style, in the best sense of the term. Walton has something to say, and it's virtually impossible to miss it—and that independently of the fact that this book, like a number of his others, is somewhat repetitive. The Place of Emotion is one of those rare books that a specialist in a field would find of interest, but that could also be taught in an undergraduate course.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 1997
Название A Feeling Disputation*
Тип research-article
DOI 10.1017/S0012217300017674
Electronic ISSN 1759-0949
Print ISSN 0012-2173
Журнал Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review
Том 36
Первая страница 787
Последняя страница 812
Аффилиация Wreen Michael J.; Marquette University
Выпуск 4

Скрыть метаданые