How to Speak, how to ListenMacmillan, 1983 - 280 ページ Briefly describes the need for communicating and treats the art of rhetoric, "sales talk," lecturing, and other types of instructive speech. Explains preparation and delivery of speech, with examples, including three essential factors of persuasion: ethos, pathos, and logos. |
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143 ページ
... engage in dispute or argument , there are also personal opinions or prejudices for which no support can be given , either by an appeal to facts or by an advance of reasons . These , too , when expressed in a conversation , should simply ...
... engage in dispute or argument , there are also personal opinions or prejudices for which no support can be given , either by an appeal to facts or by an advance of reasons . These , too , when expressed in a conversation , should simply ...
185 ページ
... engage in conversation with one another . Two - way talk that can end in a meeting of minds will always remain the irrefutable evidence that man is radically different in kind from brute animals and artificial intelligence machines ...
... engage in conversation with one another . Two - way talk that can end in a meeting of minds will always remain the irrefutable evidence that man is radically different in kind from brute animals and artificial intelligence machines ...
224 ページ
... engage in conversation in the way in which two human beings engage in conversation that is infinitely flexible and un- predictable in the turns that it will take . Whether or not the Turing machine , contrary to Descartes's prediction ...
... engage in conversation in the way in which two human beings engage in conversation that is infinitely flexible and un- predictable in the turns that it will take . Whether or not the Turing machine , contrary to Descartes's prediction ...
目次
The Untaught Skills | 3 |
The Solitary and the Social | 12 |
PART TWO UNINTERRUPTED SPEECH | 19 |
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able achieve active agreement aims animals answer session Antony argument Aristotle artificial intelligence asked Aspen Aspen Institute attention audience basic schooling brain brutes Brutus business conferences Caesar called capital Communist Manifesto conceptual thought conclusions conversation course delivered Descartes difference in kind disagreement discussion economic effective effective listening effort emotional ence engage equality ethos Harvey Cushing human identity hypothesis incarnate angel instructive speech intellectual involved issue labor labor power learning lecture liberty machines matter means meeting of minds ment moderator neurophysiology never notes occasion one's participants person persuasion political practical production purpose pursuits of leisure question and answer reader reasons rhetoric rules sales talk schooling seminar silent listening skill social speaker speaking and listening Syntopicon teaching things tion tive Turing Turing test two-way talk understanding uninterrupted speech wealth wish words writing and reading written