Fred Kauffeld
Edgewood College, Communication Studies, Faculty Member
Page 145. CHAPTER 11 FRED J. KAUFFELD THE ORDINARY PRACTICE OF PRESUMING AND PRESUMPTION WITH SPECIAL ATTENTION TO VERACITY AND THE BURDEN OF PROOF 1. INTRODUCTION This paper ...
The pragmatics underlying Paul Grice’s analysis of utterance-meaning provide a powerful framework for investigating the commitments arguers undertake. Unfortunately, the complexity of Grice’s analysis has frustrated appropriate reliance... more
The pragmatics underlying Paul Grice’s analysis of utterance-meaning provide a powerful framework for investigating the commitments arguers undertake. Unfortunately, the complexity of Grice’s analysis has frustrated appropriate reliance on this important facet of his work. By explicating Cicero’s use of apostrophe in his famous “First Catilinarian” this essay attempts to show that a full complex of reflexive gricean speaker intentions
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Page 1. Veracity, Accusation and Conspiracy in Lincoln's Campaign for the Senate' I. Introduction. Early in the Illinois senatorial campaign of 1858, Abraham Lincoln insinuated that his opponent, Stephen Douglas, was active ...
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Page 105. CHAPTER 8 FRED J. KAUFFELD PIVOTAL ISSUES AND NORMS IN RHETORICAL THEORIES OF ARGUMENTATION 1. INTRODUCTION Historically, traditions of rhetorical art and those of dialectic have been charted ...
Page 1. Veracity, Accusation and Conspiracy in Lincoln's Campaign for the Senate' I. Introduction. Early in the Illinois senatorial campaign of 1858, Abraham Lincoln insinuated that his opponent, Stephen Douglas, was active ...
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
The pragmatics underlying Paul Grice’s analysis of utterance-meaning provide a powerful framework for investigating the commitments arguers undertake. Unfortunately, the complexity of Grice’s analysis has frustrated appropriate reliance... more
The pragmatics underlying Paul Grice’s analysis of utterance-meaning provide a powerful framework for investigating the commitments arguers undertake. Unfortunately, the complexity of Grice’s analysis has frustrated appropriate reliance on this important facet of his work. By explicating Cicero’s use of apostrophe in his famous “First Catilinarian” this essay attempts to show that a full complex of reflexive gricean speaker intentions
