| Communication and Liberal 
Arts: 
  Study of the Liberal Arts began with the ancient 
	Greeks.  The original liberal arts included Grammar, Rhetoric and Logic 
	as well as arithmetic, geometry, music and astronomy.  The study of rhetoric by the Greeks represents the 
	beginning of the field of Communication.  Rhetoric for the Greeks meant 
	"persuasion" but in more modern terms means "effective communication."The most well developed ideas about rhetoric 
	originated in Athens between 500 and 300 BCE.  This is not surprising 
	because the city of Athens was one of the earliest democracies in the world.  
	The ability to speak and persuade became very important there.
  In Athens, citizens elected their leaders and made 
	political decisions by direct vote in assemblies.  All citizens were 
	able to participate (but only free males were considered citizens. Those who 
	were able to influence others through effective speaking were able to exert 
	power and influence the policies of the city.While Athens had courts, there were no lawyers.  
	Both accusers and defendants had to speak for themselves in order to attempt 
	to sway a jury (of 500 citizens).   Speech and Education in 
Greece and Rome:The Sophists 
- itinerant teachers of speech in ancient Greece
 
	
		Gorgias - believed that the 
		relationship between speaker and audience is linear and one way. 
		Adiences are passive and speakers "fill them up" with knowledge and 
		moves them to action.  Gorgias focused his teaching on use of 
		powerful words and emotions, effective phrases.Protagoras - believed that anything 
		can be argued.  He taught that it is important to know both (all) 
		sides of any issue and to prepare to argue any side as a way to discover 
		which view is most accurate or in our best interest.            
The Formal Schools 
	
		Isocrates - operated a rigorous 
		school that emphasized speech and rhetoric.  He taught that it is 
		impossible for anyone to know what is good and right in every situation. 
		Therefore, he argued that we must use our judgment to find what is 
		probably best.  Thus, speakers must be ethical and broadly 
		knowledgeable. He emphasized both style and content in speaking but did 
		not teach specific rules or procedures.  Rather, he thought 
		extensive practice and constant involvement in the affairs of the 
		community produced the best results.  He is remembered for 
		focusingon kairos, meeting the needs of the occasion.Plato - a student of Socrates, is one of 
		the great philosophers of the western world.  He did not, however, 
		agree with the sophists and feared that rhetoric could be used to 
		deceive and distort the truth.  Plato believed that the way to the 
		"good life" was through the study of philosophy and a dialectic search 
		for the truth.  Only when the truth was discovered should leaders 
		engage in rhetoric.  Thus, Plato favored a government of 
		philosopher-kings over democracy.Aristotle -  a student of Plato (and 
		teacher of Alexander the Great).  He wrote a book called 
		Rhetoric, as well as a number of other works on such topics as 
		ethics, logic and science.  Aristotle thought that rhetoric and the 
		"marketplace of ideas" allowed for truth and justice to (eventually) 
		prevail.  He also saw rehtoric as functioning in teaching, in 
		analyzing an issue (decision-making), and in defending oneself.   
		Aristotle concluded that there are three primary forms of "artistic 
		proof" used by persuaders:  ethos (character and 
		credibility), pathos (emotion) and logos 
		(logic).  Inartistic proofs involved the qualities of evidence used 
		to prove assertions.    Cicero (Roman) and the 
	Five Canons of Rhetoric 
		Invention - discovering the best arguments 
		for your position.Arrangement - determining the most 
		effective organizational pattern for the points you will make.Style - choosing the best words and 
		phrasing, level of formality.Delivery - the manner of physically and 
		vocally presenting the speech.Memory - the ability to speak without 
		notes recalling important facts and arguments. Quintilian (Roman) 
	saw a strong relationship between rhetoric and 
	civic engagement.  For him the purposes of rhetoric included:  
	defending the truth, protecting the innocent, preventing criminal behavior, 
	inspiring the military, and inspiring the public.   |