Coll-P155 Public Speaking: IU
stasis theory
every speech has a good place to rest an ending point idea that the speech consists of movement and rest
ideograph
word or phrase that is potent in expressing an ideology, ideal, a vision of life.
relation of theory and practice
you have agency and responsibility to shape the world you want to live in
agency
"the focus is less on how one person can design symbolic action to persuade other people and more on how symbolic actions spontaneously, intuitively, and often unconsciously act upon people to create a sense of collective identity.
components of a good claim
1. declarative sentence 2 tightly focused 3. no loaded language 4. calibrated appropriately to audience and constraints of your speech
rhetorical claim
addressed to particular people, on particular occasions, in a particular times and cultures, about particular issues.
inference
a leap=imagination plus experience. link that connects supporting material to each claim
strengths and weaknesses of arguments from example
advantage is that it makes a general or abstract statement more concrete and tangible. cannot be absolutely certain that examples are representative, but we can select them in a way that removes all known causes of distortion or bias. paints picture in audience mind.
analogy
a:b as C:D. comparing relationships. compare the relevant similarities of the relationship, compare the relevant dissimilarities of the relationship.
social constitution
ability to change social norms.
practical judgement
act of defining a particular person, object, or event for the purposes of making a practical decision. tells us what things are, and what we should do about them.
non sequitur
an inference in which the claim doesn't follow from the supporting material. claim couldn't be inferred from supporting material
exigence
an interruption of the norm, some imperfection that mars the calm form of the status quo.
the possible and the probable
an invitational speech operates in the boundaries of the possible and the probable. probable is better.
rhetoric as adaptation
analysis of demographics and opinions. adjusts your topics and opinions. adapt to identify areas of consensus. adapt to determine depth of your speech.
rightness of fit
appropriateness; fitness, balance, measure. hitting the target, sweet spot.
slippery slope
arguing that a small first step leads to a drastic consequences not immediately in that first step.
fallacy of division
arguing that what is true of whole is true of part.
fallacy of composition
arguing without support that what is true of the part is automatically true of the whole.
ad hominem
argument directed at character of opponent rather than quality of their reasoning.
enthymeme
argument in which one premise isn't explicitly stated.
motive
audiences were motivated by respect for the speaker (ethos) by emotional affection or dislike (pathos) and by strength of reason and evidence (logos).
structure of motives
belief, value, feeling, emotion, habit, desire.
presence
by the very fact of selecting certain elements and presenting them to the audience. their importance and pertinency to the discussion endows elements with a presence.
speech event
can be defined by a unified set of components throughout: same purpose of communication same topic same participants same language variety social constitution=speech as event.
social intelligence
capacity to negotiate complex social relationships and environments. robots lack it.
scientific proof
claim based on a system of rules by which they can be proved with absolute certainty as long as you operate within that system.
norms
common views held by society/communities
civic virtue model
community- friendship, cultivating habits of personal living. claimed to be important for success of community.
polis
community-friendship. Greek ideal.
tensions and collaborations rhetoric and philosophy
complicated relationship. rhetoric marked by urgency, philosophy can offer rhetoric.
constitution vs transmission
constitution: constitutive rhetoric, social construction. transmission: passage of info or data from one point to another is instrumental, it does not change the nature of reality or the identity of the sender or receiver.
public sphere model of communication
contributes to ongoing circulation of discourse in the public sphere and helps to create publics around issues of common interests. Circulation is the defining feature. how your own speaking is connected to the public sphere. speaker's message is influenced by other messages that circulate in the public sphere.
convention and invention
convention is norm. invention is speech art. both constantly circulating, speech act changes norms, norms then change what we say.
identification
convincing your listeners that action is necessary, ideas sound and success necessary.
transmission model
depicts public speaking as a form of one way communication from speaker to audience. shows whether listeners receive a message but doesn't show how they interpret it.
individual vs aggregate
describing an individual occurrence as an example versus describing a general statistic about a large group as an example.
dissensus
disagreement among members of a society.
paradigm shift
dramatic change in paradigm of community or individual or a change from one paradigm to another. paradigm is a framework containing basic assumptions and ways of thinking that are commonly accepted.
dissoi logoi
embody the opposing side of an argument so as to further your own or even enhance your credibility by displaying your recognition of the opposition.
paradigm of POC
even though speaker is the one talking to audience, POC is centered around audience as opposed to speaker.
particular and the general
explaining the overall sense of a topic (general). going in depth within that topic, the details (particular)
factual vs hypothetical
factual examples are actual occurrences versus created illustrations to construct an abstract example.
synecdoche
figure of contiguity, use of part for whole, or whole for part.
schemes
figures of sound and rhythm
icon
image that has become a symbol
criterion of the reasonable
in offering a rhetorical proof, you must satisfy the immediate audience and also meet a broader standard of reasonableness that would satisfy a larger imagined audience of critical thinkers.
canons of rhetoic
invention: logos ethos pathos and the proofs. arrangement: how you organize speech. style: how you speak schemes: deals with order, syntax, letters, sounds. delivery: how you articulate memory: ability to recall what it is you want to say trophes: figures of speech with an unexpected twist in the meaning of the words.
tests of sign
is the sign part of a pattern or a single unusual case.
regimes of discourse
language of corporate culture: career ladder, efficiency, getting ahead, loyalty, rising in the ranks
habiuts
like a habit. lifestyle values, dispositions and expectations of certain social groups. (2nd speech, persuade without insulting others' beliefs.)
denotation
literal meaning of a word in a contrast to the feelings or ideas the word suggests.
connotation
memory backfills from the future into the past, accruing richer meanings over time
post hoc (false causality)
mistaking a sequential relationship for a casual one (correlation is not causation)
discursive identity
not just the identity that you came into the world with, it is the identity that comes about over time through out interactions with each other and through the cultures we create for ourselves.
particular vs general
particular: a specific event that is applicable to the whole General: broader, more general abstract idea that a particular event supports
ideal speech situation
people bringing their own best thoughts, reasons, emotions, passions, to a topic of discourse.
mobilization
people don't choose the symbols that come to symbolize, they often deploy or mobilize those symbols to achieve strategic ends.
sedimentation
peoples experiences become sedimented and accrue in the meaning of public symbols. they absorb our experience. more than one life experience, more than one set of meanings can become sedimented into and triggered by symbols.
syllogism
premise + premise=conclusion form of reasoning in which a conclusion is drawn from two given or assumed propositions. each of which shares a term with a conclusion, and shares a common/ middle term not present in conclusion.
rhetorical background
provides the broader historical and social context of the speech and its audience.
circular reasoning
providing a reason that simply states the claim in different words.
counterpublics
publics that develop outside of and counter to established mechanisms of the state.
brief vs extended
quick list of examples versus complex description of one case
anaphora
repetition of beginning of word or phrase in a series of sentences
rhetorical proof
represent supporting material that ranges from strong to weak.
constraints
resources of invention. factors that limit persuasive strategies a speaker may have.
the realm of the indeterminate
rhetoric governs the realm of the indeterminate because we won't deliberate about things that are certain. rhetoric is necessary in the indeterminate realm of social means and ends.
discourse community
rhetoric is constitutive of who we are as a community. group who shares a set of discourse: understood as basic values and assumptions
exemplars
saying that you should use examples of introductions given in the book as models to guide and help you think creatively about the best way to introduce your speech.
scopus theory
scopus is not saying that only one view is right. humans are complicated, each can look an issue in more than one way.
scopus
seeing issues from different perspectives. no one POV is correct.
types of inference
sign, cause, testimony, analogy, example
false dilemma
simplifying a dilemma and making it seem like there are only two choices
"a situation" vs rhetorical situation
situation: calls forth a response rhetorical situation: exigence-functions at the organizing principle, it species the audience to be addressed and the change to be affected.
copia
skill of varying expression in order to amplify an idea fully. helps students get beyond insufficient development of a point.
society vs community
society: minimum that you agree to exist. community: group of people that close and tied together in one way. publicness involves society not community, gathering of strangers, mutual respect.
intervention
something that changes the public discourse in a specific moment. interruption of the norm resulting in the discourse to change. invention starts convention.
contingency
something that comes up out of the ordinary; needs to be addressed now.
symbol
something that stands for something else, usually concrete
composite audience
speak to each audience in turn with a different message. speak to all audiences simultaneous with unifying symbols.
style and substance
speech and thought in rhetorical theory.
loci communes
starting points for arguments in a speech
philosophical claim
studies universals, not specifies.
cause
suggests that one factor brings out another
double-two way- agency
symbolic identifications works both: outside people's willing and doing. consciously and strategically by people's intentional use.
fungibility
symbolic meanings develop over time
constitutive rhetoric
symbols and language that constitute a collective identity of an audience
testimony
test: does the statement accurately reflect the source's views. is the source an expert on the topic. is there a basis for the source's statement. is the source reasonably unbiased.
eloquence
the capacity of the beauty and power of language to illuminate and move
ideological distortion
the gap between perception and creation is where distortion seeps in.
consubstantiality
the goal of public oral communication is not merely to relay info, but rather to create a community of minds. speech is a social act.
emergent identity
the world we create through our rhetorical acts then creates the kind of people we are.
vicious relativism
there are no fixed universe values because everything evolves/adapts. modifying both your message and your audience's identity to achieve a message that resonates with your audience.
inherency
things intrinsic to a particular situation
rhetorical proof
through interaction with the speaker and listeners: provides support for a conclusion but not assurance that it is true. social matters of value.
red herring
throwing audience off track by raising an unrelated point.
topic vs claim
topic is not a claim. topic; phrase, theme, no bias. claim; sentence, states a postion.
role of transference
transport meanings, deviation from literal, transgress from norm, redescribe reality
tropes
turn a word to mean something different than its literal meaning
example
types of inference: most common reasoning pattern. specific instances that are used to illustrate a more general claim.
sign
types of inference: something that stands for something else. physical observation, statistical index, institutional regularity.
public sphere
unpredictable flow of messages among diverse speakers and audiences that helps define public sphere idea that public discourse is constantly forming.
conditioning
use of pathos to prep audience for being more receptive to appeals.
ideographic distortion
watching something horrible happen and the news takes control and spread it everywhere. alter real story in a way that benefits you or argument without changing the true meaning
condensation symbol
we fill certain symbols with values, ideas, beliefs. these symbols then become packed with meaning for us. their non-conceptual plasticity allows them to speak to diff people differently. we build ensemble within them. such a symbol thus can be a bridge between people of strongly divergent views.
plasticity of notion (productive ambiguity)
we rely on the fact that language is not a set of mathematical signs with univocal meanings, but a supple, faceted, richly underdetermined symbol system that requires us to fill in with our own experience to understand it. the eloquent speaker exploits this productive ambiguity of language to bring people together
humans as a means and ends
we should never act in such a way that we treat humanity, whether in ourselves or others, as a means only but always an end in itself
ideological webs
web of values, beliefs, understanding that are linked together because of one ideology.
materiality
what actually happened
consensus
when members of a society tend to agree with each other.
situation
when something is the matter, or about something that matters. situation calls forth a response.