Abstract

Abstract: Bernard Lamy's view of rhetoric in L'Art de Parler may be explained as an attempt to address religious exigencies. Lamy advises about two religious roles: theologian and preacher. Theologians' attempts to overcome ignorance and preachers' attempts to overcome willful blindness and inattentiveness in congregations help to account for why Lamy views truth as a matter of certainty rather than probability, and argument as syllogistic rather than connected to style and audience beliefs. Since Lamy conceives of a traditional sense of rhetoric—copious eloquence—as a source of religious problems, he advocates a modernized view of rhetoric to address them.

Journal
Rhetorica
Published
2008-11-01
DOI
10.1525/rh.2008.26.4.417
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Also cites 5 works outside this index ↓
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    Quarterly Journal of Speech  
  2. 10.3406/hel.1983.1144
    Histoire, Epistemologie, Langage  
  3. 10.1080/10417945009371140
    Southern Speech Journal  
  4. 10.1080/03637757609375914
    Communication Monographs  
  5. 10.2307/3118316