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3 pages in length. Political rhetoric played a tremendous role in the Middle Ages, ultimately – and perhaps unwittingly – setting the stage for today's political process and the extent to which speechifying has become more of an art than merely the communicatory effort of conveying information. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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the extent to which speechifying has become more of an art than merely the communicatory effort of conveying information. One might readily surmise that the political rhetoric of the
Middle Ages was at least somewhat fashioned after Gorgias, a big advocate of rhetoric who contended that "words acquire their own meaning, because they are not connected by the bonds
of being anything but themselves" (Babyak, 1995). He declared that because words are vulnerable to a variety of meanings, their inherent worth is valueless with regard to the comprehensiveness
of mans needs; as such, Gorgias was convinced words are nothing more than vehicles of manipulation available for use at any whim, granting suggestion and persuasion with every utterance.
Insofar as rhetoric represented the very art of producing said words, Gorgias fundamental contempt for words stemmed from their "art of persuasion" (Babyak, 1995). Similar to the contemporary interpretation of
political rhetoric, Gorgias paid little mind to the value of words, asserting that their presence was merely symbolic in nature and superficial in reality. Like so many others who
adopted his way of thinking, Gorgias possessed very little interest for truth, being concerned only "with efficiency, that is with the persuasive power of words" (Suzanne, 1996). With a
rhetorical epistemology solidly entrenched in his psyche, Gorgias held firm to his convictions that words were not the connection between concept and knowledge, but rather that obtaining such a possession
was not only unwarranted by humans but also impossible. As a president of the contemporary period, Richard Nixon imparted considerable influence upon the
development of rhetoric theory. The manner is which his rhetoric reflects Middle Ages influence has been widely documented by historians and politicians alike, effectively linking Nixons official capacity as
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