Description

Book Synopsis
In Enthymemes and Topoi in Dialogue, Ellen Breitholtz presents a novel and precise account of reasoning from an interactional perspective. The account draws on the concepts of enthymemes and topoi, originating in Aristotelian rhetoric and dialectic, and integrates these in a formal dialogue semantic account using TTR, a type theory with records. Argumentation analysis and formal approaches to reasoning often focus the logical validity of arguments on inferences made in discourse from a god’s-eye perspective. In contrast, Breitholtz’s account emphasises the individual perspectives of interlocutors and the function and acceptability of their reasoning in context. This provides an analysis of interactions where interlocutors have access to different topoi and therefore make different inferences.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements List of Figures 1 Micro-Rhetoric in Dialogic Interaction  1.1 Interaction Based Linguistics  1.2 Micro-rhetorical Linguistics  1.3 The Aristotelian Enthymeme  1.4 Topoi—the Warrants of Enthymemes  1.5 Linking Enthymeme and Topos  1.6 Aim and Outline of This Book 2 Enthymematic Reasoning and Pragmatics  2.1 Introduction  2.2 Presupposition  2.3 Conversational Implicature  2.4 Relevance Theory  2.5 Anti-inferentialism  2.6 Discourse Coherence  2.7 Summary 3 Enthymemes in Dialogue  3.1 Introduction  3.2 Using ttr to Analyse Interaction  3.3 Analysing a Simple Dialogue  3.4 Introducing Enthymematic Reasoning on the dgb  3.5 Summary 4 Analysing Enthymematic Dialogue  4.1 Enthymeme Elicited by Why?  4.2 Coordinating on Topoi  4.3 Summary 5 Participating in Enthymematic Dialogue  5.1 Enthymemes and Cognitive Load  5.2 Enthymemes and Dialogue Context  5.3 Conversational Games  5.4 The Suggestion Game  5.5 Analysing a Suggestion Dialogue  5.6 Summary 6 Rhetorical Reasoning in Dialogue  6.1 A Rhetorical Perspective on Non-monotonicity  6.2 Drawing on Topoi in Conversation  6.3 Acquiring Topoi in Interaction  6.4 Summary 7 Conclusions and Future Work  7.1 Conclusions  7.2 Future Work  7.3 Summary Appendix 1: Update Rules Appendix 2: Definitions References Index

Enthymemes and Topoi in Dialogue: The Use of Common Sense Reasoning in Conversation

    Product form

    £100.80

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Ellen Breitholtz

    Out of stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Enthymemes and Topoi in Dialogue: The Use of Common Sense Reasoning in Conversation by Ellen Breitholtz

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 19/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9789004436787, 978-9004436787
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Enthymemes and Topoi in Dialogue, Ellen Breitholtz presents a novel and precise account of reasoning from an interactional perspective. The account draws on the concepts of enthymemes and topoi, originating in Aristotelian rhetoric and dialectic, and integrates these in a formal dialogue semantic account using TTR, a type theory with records. Argumentation analysis and formal approaches to reasoning often focus the logical validity of arguments on inferences made in discourse from a god’s-eye perspective. In contrast, Breitholtz’s account emphasises the individual perspectives of interlocutors and the function and acceptability of their reasoning in context. This provides an analysis of interactions where interlocutors have access to different topoi and therefore make different inferences.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements List of Figures 1 Micro-Rhetoric in Dialogic Interaction  1.1 Interaction Based Linguistics  1.2 Micro-rhetorical Linguistics  1.3 The Aristotelian Enthymeme  1.4 Topoi—the Warrants of Enthymemes  1.5 Linking Enthymeme and Topos  1.6 Aim and Outline of This Book 2 Enthymematic Reasoning and Pragmatics  2.1 Introduction  2.2 Presupposition  2.3 Conversational Implicature  2.4 Relevance Theory  2.5 Anti-inferentialism  2.6 Discourse Coherence  2.7 Summary 3 Enthymemes in Dialogue  3.1 Introduction  3.2 Using ttr to Analyse Interaction  3.3 Analysing a Simple Dialogue  3.4 Introducing Enthymematic Reasoning on the dgb  3.5 Summary 4 Analysing Enthymematic Dialogue  4.1 Enthymeme Elicited by Why?  4.2 Coordinating on Topoi  4.3 Summary 5 Participating in Enthymematic Dialogue  5.1 Enthymemes and Cognitive Load  5.2 Enthymemes and Dialogue Context  5.3 Conversational Games  5.4 The Suggestion Game  5.5 Analysing a Suggestion Dialogue  5.6 Summary 6 Rhetorical Reasoning in Dialogue  6.1 A Rhetorical Perspective on Non-monotonicity  6.2 Drawing on Topoi in Conversation  6.3 Acquiring Topoi in Interaction  6.4 Summary 7 Conclusions and Future Work  7.1 Conclusions  7.2 Future Work  7.3 Summary Appendix 1: Update Rules Appendix 2: Definitions References Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account