Browse
Art of Rhetoric

Art of Rhetoric

by Harvard University Press

£24.95
MPN9780674997325
Prices updated 21 May 2026

Compare 1 Retailer

Prices checked 26d ago
TGJones logo

TGJones

BEST PRICE
In stock£3.99 delivery2 - 4 working days
3 deals available
£24.95

£28.94 total inc. delivery

Best Price

Amazon

Check live price on Amazon.co.uk

eBay

Check availability and price on eBay.co.uk. Yorkshire.com may be paid for purchases made through this link, by eBay Partner Network.

Check on eBay

Can’t find it elsewhere?

Product Description

Persuasion analyzed. Aristotle (384–322 BC), the great Greek thinker, researcher, and educator, ranks among the most important and influential figures in the history of philosophy, theology, and science.He joined Plato’s Academy in Athens in 367 and remained there for twenty years.After spending three years at the Asian court of a former pupil, Hermeias, where he married Pythias, one of Hermeias’ relations, and living for a time at Mytilene, he was appointed by Philip of Macedon in 343/2 to become tutor of his teenaged son, Alexander.After Philip’s death in 336, Aristotle became head of his own school, the Lyceum at Athens, whose followers were known as the Peripatetics. Because of anti-Macedonian feeling in Athens after Alexander’s death in 323, Aristotle withdrew to Chalcis in Euboea, where he died in 322. Aristotle wrote voluminously on a broad range of subjects analytical, practical, and theoretical, but nearly all the works that he prepared for publication are lost; extant are lecture-materials, notes, and memoranda, some spurious.Rhetoric, a manual for public speakers, was probably composed while Aristotle was still at the Academy and Isocrates was still alive.Instead of the sophistic and Isocratean method of imitating model speeches, Aristotle devised a systematic method based in dialectic, on which he had recently written the first manual.The goal of rhetoric is to find the available means of persuasion for any given case using argument, the character of the speaker, and the emotions of the audience.Rhetoric, he says, is “a kind of offshoot from dialectic and the study of character, which is justly called the science of politics.”This edition of Aristotle’s Rhetoric, which replaces the original Loeb edition by J.H. Freese, supplies a Greek text based on that of Rudolf Kassel, a fresh translation, and ample annotation fully current with modern scholarship.

More products from TGJones

Browse their full range on Yorkshire.com

Deals from Books retailers

From£24.95TGJones
Buy Now