FOOTNOTESIndex
- Abbreviated names, [229-30]
- Address Preceding the Removal of the Senate from the Old to the New Chamber, [176-77]
- Adler, Mortimer J., [27], [30-31]
- Aesthetic distance, [175-79]
- “aggressor,” [231-32]
- “allies,” [221-22]
- “American,” [218-20]
- Anderson, Sherwood, [226]
- Animadversions upon the Remonstrant’s Defence against Smectymnuus, [160]
- Areopagitica, [147], [150], [159]
- Aristotle
- definition of dialectical problem, [15-16]
- cited, [128], [203]
- Beveridge, Albert, [85]
- Beyle, Herman C., [192]
- Bible, [14], [214]
- Bishop, John Peale, [161], [201]
- Blish, James, [5]
- Bongiorno, Andrew, [203]
- Breckinridge, John C., [176]
- Bryan, William Jennings, [36-39], [41]
- Bryan, William Jennings, Jr., [35]
- Burke, Edmund
- on the Catholic question, [58-62]
- policy toward American colonies, [62-65]
- policy toward India, [65-68]
- policy toward the French Revolution, [68-72]
- on metaphysics, [72-73]
- Burke, Kenneth, [22], [128], [225]
- Carlyle, Thomas, [133]
- Carroll, E. Malcolm, [79]
- Caste spirit, [206-8]
- Channing, W. E., [143]
- Charismatic terms, [227-32]
- Chase, Stuart, [8]
- Choate, Rufus, [179]
- Churchill, Winston, [20]
- Cicero, [174]
- Circumstance, argument from, defined, [57]
- “Communist,” [222-23]
- Craddock, Charles Egbert, [165]
- Darrow, Clarence, [32], [34-35], [41]
- Demetrius, On Style, [173]
- “democracy,” [228-29]
- Democracy in America, Tocqueville’s, [76]
- DeWitt, Norman J., [174]
- Dialectical terms, [48], [52-53], [187-88];
- Plato on, [16]
- Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce, [146], [153]
- Duhamel, P. Albert, [3]
- “efficient,” [217-18]
- Eisenhower, Dwight D., [81]
- Epistemology, in relation to oratory, [178-82]
- Ewing, Representative Andrew, [164-65]
- “fact,” [214-15]
- Faris, Ellsworth, [205]
- Faulkner, Charles J., [168]
- Federal Prose, [199-200]
- “freedom,” [228]
- Genus, argument from, defined, [56]
- GI rhetoric, [225-26]
- Greek language, [140]
- Harding, T. Swann, [208]
- Hay, John, [85]
- Hays, Arthur Garfield, [35-36]
- Henley, W. E., [131]
- Herndon, W. H., [85], [89], [111-12]
- “history,” [220-21]
- Huxley, T. H., [8], [122-23]
- Inverted hierarchies, [224-27]
- Jackson, Andrew, [78]
- James, Henry, [121-22], [123], [133-34]
- Jameson, Samuel H., [197]
- Laski, Harold, [207]
- Latinate terms, [196-201]
- Lincoln, Abraham
- argument from genus “man,” [87-95]
- First Inaugural Address, [96-100]
- on definition, [104-5]
- and the excluded middle, [105-7]
- his perspective, [108-11]
- Lundberg, George, [204]
- Lysias, speech of, [5-7]
- Malone, Dudley Field, [35], [39], [47-48]
- Maritain, Jacques, [21], [24]
- Mather, Kirtley F., [42-43], [51]
- Melioristic bias, [195-201]
- Metaphor, attitude of social scientists toward, [202-6]
- Metcalf, Maynard, [49]
- Milton, John
- primacy of the concept, [144-52]
- extended metaphor, use of, [150-52]
- antithetical expressions, use of, [152-55]
- superlative mode, [155-58]
- systematic collocation, use of, [158-61]
- “modern,” [217]
- Morley, John, [67]
- Murray, Paul, [79], [80], [81]
- Nicolay, John G., [85]
- Of Reformation in England, [145], [148], [154], [156]
- Orwell, George, [228], [229], [230]
- Parts of speech
- noun, [127-28]
- adjective, [129-33]
- adverb, [133-34]
- verb, [135-36]
- conjunction, [137-38]
- preposition, [138-39]
- Pedantic empiricism, [191-95]
- Phrases, [139-41]
- Plato
- method of transcendence, [4-5], [18-19]
- on madness as a form of inspiration, [13]
- definition of positive and dialectical terms, [16]
- on the nature of the soul, [17]
- Position and Function of the American Bar, as an Element of Conservatism in the State, The, [179-81]
- “prejudice,” [223-24]
- Primary equivocation, [187-91]
- Prior, James, [75-76]
- “progress,” [212-14]
- Reason of Church Government Urged Against Prelaty, [151]
- Rhetorical syllogism, [173]
- Right of assumption, [169]
- Russell, Bertrand, [191], [204]
- Sandburg, Carl, [129]
- Santillana, George de, [203-4]
- “science,” [215-16]
- Seeman, Melvin, [192]
- “semantically purified” speech, [7-10]
- Sentence
- defined, [117-18]
- grammatical types of, [119-27]
- Shapiro, Karl, [130]
- Similitude, argument from, defined, [56-57]
- Spinoza, B., [25]
- Stewart, Attorney-general of Tennessee, [32], [33], [39], [41], [46-47]
- Stylization, [182-83]
- Tate, Allen, [118]
- Taylor, A. E., [3]
- Taylor, Donald J., [194]
- Tennessee anti-evolution law, [29-30]
- Tocqueville, Alexis de, [76]
- Tuve, Rosemund, [150]
- Twain, Mark, [136], [224]
- Uncontested terms, [166-71], [184]
- Where the Battle Was Fought, [165]
- Whig political philosophy, [76-80]
- Williamson, Samuel T., [186]