The Topics of Argument
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The TopicsThe Topicsof of
ArgumentArgument
Julie TedderJulie Tedder2010 - 20112010 - 2011
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Within rhetorical invention, the topics or topoi are basic categories of relationships among ideas, each of which can serve as a template or heuristic for discovering things to say about a subject. "Topics of invention" literally means "places to find things." Aristotle divided these into the "Common" and "Special" topics of invention.
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The The SpecialSpecial Topics Topics
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You have an occasion, you have a reader, and you have a message (your response to the essay prompt). The next thing you need to consider is what type of rhetoric you going to be using.The special topics help you with this. They define the purpose of your essay. There are three special topics, one dealing with issues of the PAST, one dealing with issues of the PRESENT, and one dealing with issues of the FUTURE.
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Three Special Topics:
•Ceremonial (Epideictic)•Judicial•Deliberative
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Ceremonial Address• Praising and Blaming• Virtue and Vice• Tied to the PRESENT – whether
someone or something is noble or base• Examples:
Graduation speechesMemorial servicesDedications
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Ceremonial Address• The Praiseworthy (Virtuous)
– Courage– Temperance– Justice– Liberality– Magnanimity– Prudence– Gentleness
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Ceremonial Address• The Blameworthy
– Cowardice– Incontinence– Injustice– Illiberality– Meanness of spirit– Rashness– Brutality
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Judicial Address• Deal with Justice and Injustice• Deals with whether an act of the PAST is
right or wrong, whether someone is guilty or innocent.
• Examples:The Declaration of IndependenceEditorials denouncing policyForensic Courtroom Cases
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Judicial Questions• Evidence
– What is the evidence– Method of evidence gathering– Reliability of evidence– Credibility of witnesses
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Judicial Questions• Definition
– What specifically is the charge being made?– What is the legal definition of the alleged
injustice?• Written, promulgated law• Unwritten, natural law• Rights: positive and negative
– Who was harmed?
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Judicial Questions
• Motives or causes: intention, motives, character
of doer and victim, extenuating circumstance
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Deliberative Address• Deals with the good, the worthy, the
advantageous / the bad, the unworthy, the disadvantageous
• Deals with FUTURE decisions that must be made (goodness for goodness’ sake, advantageous to most/some)
• Examples:Henry’s Speech to the Virginia ConventionCongressional or Supreme Court decisionsDeclarations of War
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The The CommonCommon Topics Topics
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Now that you have considered your occasion, reader, type of rhetoric, special appeals as well as generated a thesis statement, you need to dig into the specific content of your particular essay.
To this end, you use the common topics, a list of topics from which you ‘invent’ arguments for each paragraph of the essay about your subject, “A”.
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Five Categories of Common Topics:
• Definition• Comparison• Relationship• Circumstance• Testimony
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Definition by Genus• A is B, meaning A (as a category)
belongs within the category of B.– All men are mortal beings.– Socrates is a man.
– Some college students are taxpayers.– No professors are college students.
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Definition by Division• B, C, and D comprise A.• A is composed of B, C, and D.
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Comparison• Argument of similarity
– Made to show similarity when difference is the most obvious quality
• Argument of difference– Made to show difference when similarity is
the most obvious quality• Argument of degree
– Greater/lesser, more/less, better/worse arguments
– Frequently inverts the common perception
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Relationship• Cause and effect
– Key issue is adequacy.– Multiple causation and/or effect
• Antecedent-consequent– Result of human decision-making– Consequent is likely, not certain
• Contraries– Establishing opposite or opposing conditions
• Contradictories– Denial or negation only
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CircumstanceArguing from present knowledge
• Future fact– Prediction
• Past fact– Recreating the past
• Possiblity/Impossibility– A fortiori argument (If one thing is likely,
how much more likely is something stronger? If one thing is not likely, how much less likely is something weaker?)
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TestimonyEmphasis on who is speaking
• Authority • Testimonial• Statistics• Maxim/Proverb• Law• Precedent
• Oath/Affidafit• Witnesses• Supernatural
Force/Events
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Through understanding the Topics Through understanding the Topics of Invention, we can not only more of Invention, we can not only more
efficiently compose our own efficiently compose our own arguments, but we can better arguments, but we can better
discern the purpose of the discern the purpose of the arguments of others!arguments of others!