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Leo Groarke

Trent University
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 More details
  • Trent University
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
  • All publications (67)
  • Lógica Informal
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. forthcoming.
  •  90
    Form and Transformation: A Study in the Philosophy of Plotinus Frederic M. Schroeder McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Ideas, Vol. 16. Kingston and Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1992, xiv + 125 pp., $34.95 (review)
    Dialogue 33 (4): 751-. 1994.
    Plotinus
  •  59
    Zeno's Dichotomy: Undermining The Modern Response
    Zeno of Elea
  •  59
    Commentary on Roque
  •  79
    The Skeptical Tradition Myles Burnyeat, editor Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1983. Pp. 450. $38.50 cloth: $10.95 paper (review)
    Dialogue 24 (4): 746-. 1985.
    History: Skepticism
  •  33
    8. Can Capitalism Save Itself? Some Ruminations on the Fate of Capitalism
    In John Douglas Bishop (ed.), Ethics and Capitalism, University of Toronto Press. pp. 196-218. 2000.
    Socialism and Marxism
  •  46
    Seduction as deduction: persuasion as deductive argument
    Both 'persuasion' and 'rational convincing' play a major role in argumentative discourse but only the latter is said to constitute argument and be amenable to traditional logical analysis. I argue against this assumption by showing that there are many paradigmatic instances of persuasion which are best understood as implicit arguments. So understood, acts of persuasion can conform to well recognized argument schemata and are best assessed accordingly. I shall argue that the attempt to distinguis…Read more
    Both 'persuasion' and 'rational convincing' play a major role in argumentative discourse but only the latter is said to constitute argument and be amenable to traditional logical analysis. I argue against this assumption by showing that there are many paradigmatic instances of persuasion which are best understood as implicit arguments. So understood, acts of persuasion can conform to well recognized argument schemata and are best assessed accordingly. I shall argue that the attempt to distinguish arg ument and persuasion is fraught with difficulties. I contrast my conclusions with those of authors like Gilbert, Johnson, and Johnson and Blair.
    Informal Logic
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