The Hermeneutics of Original Argument: Demonstration, Dialectic, Rhetoric [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 53 (3):731-732 (2000)
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Abstract

Taking as his point of departure Heidegger’s description of hermeneutics as the “process of making things clear in talking about them,” Smith sets out to “lay bare” or “lay out” the nature of argument by presenting a tightly interwoven series of readings of the great philosophical works that have shaped our understanding of demonstration, dialectic, and rhetoric. His interpretations of the relevant works of Plato and Aristotle focus on explicit and implicit references to argument as it actually occurs in conversations and discussions rather than as it is filtered through abstractive theories. In the process the author discloses heretofore unnoticed or deemphasized themes in these ancient texts.

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