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- catalog contributor b1785574.
- catalog contributor b1785575.
- catalog contributor b1785576.
- catalog created "[1963]".
- catalog date "1963".
- catalog date "[1963]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1963]".
- catalog description "Bibliographical footnotes.".
- catalog description "Part I: Eloquence -- Of wit, humour, and ridicule -- The doctrine of the preceding chapter defended -- Of the relation which eloquence bears to logic and to grammar -- Of the different sources of evidence and the different subjects to which they are respectively adapted -- Of the nature and use of the scholastic art of syllogizing -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of the hearers of men in general -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of the hearers, as such men in particular -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of himself -- The different kinds of public speaking in use among the moderns, compared, with a view to their different advantages in respect of eloquence -- Of the cause of that pleasure which we receive from objects or representations that excite pity and other painful feelings -- Part II: The foundations and essential properties of elocution -- The nature and characters of the use which gives law to language -- The nature and use of verbal criticism, with its principal canons -- Of grammatical purity -- Some grammatical doubts in regard to English construction stated and examined -- Of the qualities of style strictly rhetorical of perspicuity -- What is the cause that nonsense so often escapes being detected, both by the writer and by the reader -- The extensive usefulness of perspicuity -- May there not be an excess of perspicuity? -- Part III: The discriminating properties of elocution -- Of vivacity as depending on the choice of words -- Of vivacity as depending on the number of the words -- Of vivacity as depending on the arrangement of the words -- Of the connectives employed in combining the parts of a sentence -- Of the connectives employed in combining the sentences in a discourse.".
- catalog extent "lii, 415, [liii]-lxi p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Philosophy of rhetoric.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Philosophy of rhetoric.".
- catalog isPartOf "Landmarks in rhetoric and public address".
- catalog issued "1963".
- catalog issued "[1963]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press".
- catalog relation "Philosophy of rhetoric.".
- catalog subject "808.001".
- catalog subject "English language Rhetoric Early works to 1800.".
- catalog subject "English language Rhetoric.".
- catalog subject "PN173 .C3 1963".
- catalog subject "Rhetoric Early works to 1800.".
- catalog subject "Rhetoric.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part I: Eloquence -- Of wit, humour, and ridicule -- The doctrine of the preceding chapter defended -- Of the relation which eloquence bears to logic and to grammar -- Of the different sources of evidence and the different subjects to which they are respectively adapted -- Of the nature and use of the scholastic art of syllogizing -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of the hearers of men in general -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of the hearers, as such men in particular -- Of the consideration which the speaker ought to have of himself -- The different kinds of public speaking in use among the moderns, compared, with a view to their different advantages in respect of eloquence -- Of the cause of that pleasure which we receive from objects or representations that excite pity and other painful feelings -- Part II: The foundations and essential properties of elocution -- The nature and characters of the use which gives law to language -- The nature and use of verbal criticism, with its principal canons -- Of grammatical purity -- Some grammatical doubts in regard to English construction stated and examined -- Of the qualities of style strictly rhetorical of perspicuity -- What is the cause that nonsense so often escapes being detected, both by the writer and by the reader -- The extensive usefulness of perspicuity -- May there not be an excess of perspicuity? -- Part III: The discriminating properties of elocution -- Of vivacity as depending on the choice of words -- Of vivacity as depending on the number of the words -- Of vivacity as depending on the arrangement of the words -- Of the connectives employed in combining the parts of a sentence -- Of the connectives employed in combining the sentences in a discourse.".
- catalog title "The philosophy of rhetoric. Edited by Lloyd F. Bitzer. Foreword by David Potter.".
- catalog type "Early works. fast".
- catalog type "text".