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Defining
Reality Definitions
and the Politics of Meaning
Edward Schiappa
May
2003 ISBN 0-8093-2501-2, $29.50 paper ISBN 0-8093-2500-4, $60.00 cloth 224 pages, 6 x 9 Rhetoric / Legal Studies / Philosophy
Rhetorical
Philosophy and Theory David E. Blakesley, series editor
“In a thorough and well-written book, Edward Schiappa shows that many arguments, particularly in law, are really about how concepts are defined.” —Erwin
Chemerinsky, University of Southern California
In
Defining Reality, Edward Schiappa argues that definitional disputes
should be treated less as philosophical questions of “is” and
more as sociopolitical questions of “ought.” Instead of asking “What
is X?” he advocates that definitions be considered as proposals for
shared knowledge and institutional norms, as in “What should count as X
in context Y, given our needs and interests?”
Covering
a broad scope of argument in rhetorical theory, as well as in legal,
medical, scientific, and environmental debates, Schiappa shows the act of
defining to be a specialized and learned behavior, and therefore one that
can be studied and improved. In response to theories that deem discourse
to be persuasive, the author asserts that all discourse is definitive
discourse that contributes to our construction of a shared reality.
Defining
Reality sheds light on
our methods of creating common truths through language and argumentation
and forces us to reconsider the contexts, limitations, and adaptability of
our definitions. Hinging on a synthesis of arguments regarding the
significance of definitional practices, the book is bolstered by a series
of case studies of debates about rape, euthanasia, abortion, and political
and environmental issues. These case studies ground Schiappa’s concepts
in reality and delineate the power of public discourse within legal
contexts. Ranging widely among disciplines from philosophy and classical
philology to constitutional law and cognitive psychology, this study
substantially contributes to the scholarship of rhetoric and
argumentation, particularly as they function in the realm of public
discourse.
Edward Schiappa is the Paul W. Frenzel Chair of Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota and a professor and the director of graduate studies in the Department of Communications Studies. A past editor of the journal Argumentation and Advocacy, he is the author of Protagoras and Logos: A Study in Greek Philosophy and Rhetoric and The Beginnings of Greek Rhetorical Theory.
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