A Dialogue Concerning Oratorical Partitions(c. 50 BC)
De Optimo Genere Oratorum(46 BC)
Orator(46 BC)
On the Sublime(c. 50)
Institutio Oratoria(95)
Panegyrici Latini(100–400)
Dialogus de oratoribus(102)
De doctrina Christiana(426)
De vulgari eloquentia(1305)
Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style(1521)
Language as Symbolic Action(1966)
A General Rhetoric(1970)
Subfields
Argumentation
Cognitive
Contrastive
Constitutive
Digital
Feminist
Native American
New
Health and medicine
Pedagogy
Procedural
Science
Technology
Therapy
Visual
Composition
Related
Ars dictaminis
Communication studies
Composition studies
Doxa
Glossary of rhetorical terms
Glossophobia
List of feminist rhetoricians
List of speeches
Oral skills
Orator
Pistis
Public rhetoric
Rhetoric of social intervention model
Rhetrickery
Rogerian argument
Seduction
Speechwriting
Talking point
TED
Terministic screen
Toulmin model
Wooden iron
v
t
e
Dissoi logoi (Greek δισσοὶ λόγοι, "contrasting arguments") is a rhetorical exercise of unknown authorship, most likely dating to just after the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) based on comments within the exercise's text. The exercise is intended to help an individual gain deeper understanding of an issue by forcing them to consider it from the angle of their opponent, which may serve either to strengthen their argument or to help the debaters reach compromise.[1]
^For a different assessment of the work see Molinelli, S. (2018) Dissoi Logoi: A New Commented Edition, Durham theses, Durham
University, 296-297 (http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/12451/1/Dis._Log..pdf?DDD3+)
Dissoilogoi (Greek δισσοὶ λόγοι, "contrasting arguments") is a rhetorical exercise of unknown authorship, most likely dating to just after the Peloponnesian...
allowing the author to be judged on his own terms. In one case, the Dissoilogoi, an important sophist text survived but knowledge of its author has been...
matter, there are two arguments (logoi) opposed to one another. Consequently, he may have been the author of Dissoilogoi, an ancient Sophistic text on such...
referred to as arrangement, the second of Cicero's five rhetorical canons. Dissoilogoi – contradictory arguments. Docere – to teach; viewed by Cicero as one...
measurements through his "human-measure" principle and the practice of dissoilogoi (arguing multiple sides of an issue). This history helps explain why...
liberty—the cause of humanity. — William Jennings Bryan Logos (plural: logoi) is logical appeal or the simulation of it,: 38 and the term logic is derived...