| Aristotle |
Greek philosopher (384-322 bc), first drama critic, The Poetics.
Ãâó: act.vtheatre.net/dict.html
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| Aristotle |
384 - 322 BCE - Aristotle was one of Plato's students, and remains one of the most important thinkers in Western Civilization to this day. Although Aristotle believed in universal forms, like Plato, Aristotle did not agree with Plato's idea of ideal forms. Aristotle believed that form and matter were inseparable and that each physical object encompasses the totality of its form, without extension beyond itself. ...
Ãâó: www.2ad.com/~john/history/unit1_defs/
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| Aristotle |
Art' of Rhetoric
Ãâó: www.hf.ntnu.no/engelsk/shakespeare/defs.htm
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| Aristotle |
The standard translation has been: "Rhetoric is the counterpart of dialectic.... Rhetoric is the art of discovering the available means of persuasion in the given case." The recent translation by Geo. Kennedy is "Rhetoric is an antistrophos to dialectic.... Let rhetoric be [defined as] an ability, in each [particular] case, to see the available means of persuasion. This is the function of no other art...."
Ãâó: lingua.utdallas.edu/rhetoric/rhetorics.html
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