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Dialectic and Rhetoric in Political Argumentation. Between strategic maneuvering and critical discussion. Political argumentation. Political argumentation is: the discourse of the public sphere. Political argumentation. Political argumentation is: the discourse of the public sphere
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Dialectic and Rhetoric in Political Argumentation Between strategic maneuvering and critical discussion
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is: • the discourse of the public sphere
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is: • the discourse of the public sphere to which access is in principle unrestricted and for which technical expertise is not the price of admission;
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is: • the discourse of the public sphere to which access is in principle unrestricted and for which technical expertise is not the price of admission; • an unregulated and often free-form discourse;
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is: • the discourse of the public sphere to which access is in principle unrestricted and for which technical expertise is not the price of admission; • an unregulated and often free-form discourse; • a discourse reflecting the particularities of a specific political culture.
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is about: • gaining and using power;
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is about: • gaining and using power; • collective decision-making for the public good;
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is about: • gaining and using power; • collective decision-making for the public good; • mobilizing individuals in pursuit of common goals;
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is about: • gaining and using power; • collective decision-making for the public good; • mobilizing individuals in pursuit of common goals; • giving effective voice to shared hopes and fears.
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is not institutionalized in a formal sense:
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is not institutionalized in a formal sense: • absence of time limits
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is not institutionalized in a formal sense: • absence of time limits • lack of a clear terminus
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is not institutionalized in a formal sense: • absence of time limits • lack of a clear terminus • heterogeneous audiences
Political argumentation • Political argumentation is not institutionalized in a formal sense: • absence of time limits • lack of a clear terminus • heterogeneous audiences • open access
Pragma-dialectics - “In pragma-dialectics dialectic is defined pragmatically as a method for dealing systematically with critical exchanges in verbal communication and interaction ‘that amounts to the pragmatic application of logic, a collaborative method of putting logic into use so as to move from conjecture and opinion to more secure belief’” (van Eemeren et al., 1996: 214).
The Ten Rules of Pragma-Dialectics • Parties must not prevent each other from advancing or casting doubt on standpoints • Whoever advances a standpoint is obliged to defend it if asked to do so • An attack on a standpoint must relate to the standpoint that has really been advanced by the protagonist • A standpoint may be defended only by advancing argumentation relating to that standpoint • A person can be held to the premise he leaves implicit • A standpoint must be regarded as conclusively defended if the defence takes place by means of the common starting point • A standpoint must be regarded as conclusively defended if the defence takes place by means of arguments in which a commonly accepted scheme of argumentation is correctly applied • The argument used in a discursive text must be valid or capable of being validated by the explicitation of one or more unexpressed premises • A failed defence must result in the protagonist withdrawing his standpoint and a successful defence must result in the antagonist withdrawing his doubt about the standpoint • Formulation must be neither puzzlingly vague nor confusingly ambiguous and must be interpreted as accurately as possible [source: van Eemeren and Grootendorst, 1987: 284-291]
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering • “As far as it is pertinent to pragma-dialectics, rhetoric is the theoretical study of the potential effectiveness of argumentative discourse in convincing or persuading an audience in actual argumentative practice.” (Van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2007)
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering • “...the gap between dialectic and rhetoric can be bridged by introducing the theoretical concept of ‘strategic manoeuvring’ (van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2002). • Strategic manoeuvring refers to the efforts arguers make in argumentative discourse to reconcile aiming for rhetorical effectiveness with maintaining dialectical standards of reasonableness”. (Van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2007)
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering - “Strategic maneuvering manifests itself in argumentative discourse in the choices that are made from the ‘topical potential’ available at a certain stage in the discourse, in ‘audience-directed framing’ of the argumentative moves, and in the purposive use of ‘presentational devices.’” (Van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2007)
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering • Topical potential: selection of what lines of argument to use
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering • Topical potential: selection of what lines of argument to use • Audience demand: adaptation of one's argument to the beliefs and commitments of the audience
Rhetoric and Strategic Maneuvering • Topical potential: selection of what lines of argument to use • Audiencedemand: adaptation of one's argument to the beliefs and commitments of the audience • Presentational choice: matters of style, structure, clarity, literalness or figurativeness…
Douglas Walton’s Typology [source: Walton, 2003]
Means of Strategic Maneuvering • Changin the Subject (Zafelsky 2008) • Modifying the Relevant Audience (Schattshneider 1960) • Appealing to Liberal and Conservative Presumptions (Goodnight 1980) • Reframing the argument (Perelman & Olbrecths-Tyteca 1958, Zafelsky 2006) • Using Condensation Symbols (Sapyr 1934) • Employing the Locus of the Irreparable (Perelman & Olbrecths-Tyteca 1958) • Using Figures and tropes argumentatively (Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca 1958)
Critical discussion / Strategic maneuvering Is it possible to evaluate the acceptability of strategic maneuvering by reference to the rules for a critical discussion?
Critical discussion / Strategic maneuvering “In a normative sense, political argumentation shares some of the characteristics of a critical discussion, but it is shaped largely by the constraints of a sphere of argument that is open to all without preconditions regarding training, expertise, or prior commitments. These circumstances require that the argument critic give wide latitude to the participants and be charitable in understanding what they are trying to do” [Zafelsky 2008]
Bibliography • Goodnight 1980: The Liberal and the Conservative Presumption, in Proceedings of the Summer Conference on Argumentation, Annandale, VA, Speech Communication Association • Perelman & Olbrecths-Tyteca 1958: Traité de l'argumentation. La nouvelle rhétorique, Paris, Presses Universitaires de France • Schattshneider 1960: The semisovereign people: A realist’s view of democracy in America, New York, Holt, Rinehart & Winston • Van Eemeren & Grootendorst 1996: Fundamentals of argumentation theory, Mahawa, L. Erlbaum • van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2002: Dialectic and rhetoric: The warp and woof of argumentation analysis, Dordrecht, Kluwer • van Eemeren & Houtlosser, 2007: Argumentative Indicators in Discourse, Springer • Walton 1996: Argumentation Schemes for Presumptive Reasoning, Mahwah, L. Erlbaum • Zafelsky 2006: Fundamentals of Critical Argumentation, New York, Cambridge University Press. • Zafelsky 2008: Strategic Maneuvering in Political Argumentation, in «Argumentation», 22, pp. 317–330