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. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 25
24 ページ
... rhetoric comes in . Rare as the need for rhetoric may be when we are speaking only to ourselves , we are unlikely to be able to do without it when we are speaking to others . The reason is clear . We almost always have to try to ...
... rhetoric comes in . Rare as the need for rhetoric may be when we are speaking only to ourselves , we are unlikely to be able to do without it when we are speaking to others . The reason is clear . We almost always have to try to ...
25 ページ
... rhetoric is concerned with effective persuasion in speaking to others , we cannot help being struck by the fact that , in its long history , rhetoric has been so closely , if not exclusively , associated with oratory . Many books on the ...
... rhetoric is concerned with effective persuasion in speaking to others , we cannot help being struck by the fact that , in its long history , rhetoric has been so closely , if not exclusively , associated with oratory . Many books on the ...
28 ページ
... rhetoric recommended itself . That is how rhetoric first got a bad name , which it has never been able to shake off completely ; it is important for all of us to remember that sophistry is an unscrupulous use of rhetoric . The thing ...
... rhetoric recommended itself . That is how rhetoric first got a bad name , which it has never been able to shake off completely ; it is important for all of us to remember that sophistry is an unscrupulous use of rhetoric . The thing ...
目次
The Untaught Skills | 3 |
The Solitary and the Social | 12 |
PART TWO UNINTERRUPTED SPEECH | 19 |
著作権 | |
他の 16 セクションは表示されていません
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
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