Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Chaim Perelman

    May 20, 1912 – January 22, 1984

    Chaïm Perelman, a Polish-born philosopher of law, dedicated much of his life to studying and teaching in Brussels. He stands as one of the most significant argumentation theorists of the twentieth century. His seminal work explores the intricacies of how persuasion and argumentation function across various domains. Perelman's contribution offers a profound understanding of human interaction, establishing the new rhetoric as a vital tool for analysis and insight.

    Juristische Logik als Argumentationslehre
    Logik und Argumentation
    Das Reich der Rhetorik
    Die neue Rhetorik
    Realm of Rhetoric, The
    The New Rhetoric
    • 1982

      The Realm of Rhetoric follows in the tradition of the author's The New Rhetoric , hailed for its wide-ranging and innovative approaches to argumentation. In this new study Chaim Perelman continues to develop his ideas on the theory of rhetoric, now even more cogently and persuasively presented. Pruned of much detail present in the earlier book, this new work captures the essence of his thought in a style and presentation suitable to the program and needs of an English-speaking audience. It is an ideal instruction medium for students approaching theories of informal argumentation for the first time. Perelman raises the questions, "How do claims to reasonableness arise in prose that is not formally logical?" and "What does 'reasonableness' mean for some who speaks of 'reasonable men' or 'beyond reasonable doubt'?" He then shows how claims to rationality are embedded in a number of verbal structures heretofore considered exclusively ornamental or dispositional. He identifies and discusses many argumentative techniques in addition to the quasi-logical methods conventionally treated in textbooks and notes numerous subforms of argumentation within each of the general types he identifies.

      Realm of Rhetoric, The
    • 1971