more on this theme | more from this thinker
Full Idea
Didactic arguments are those which reason from the principles appropriate to each branch of learning and not from the opinions of the answerer (for he who is learning must take things on trust).
Clarification
'Didactic' argument aims at converting people to a view
Gist of Idea
Didactic argument starts from the principles of the subject, not from the opinions of the learner
Source
Aristotle (Sophistical Refutations [c.331 BCE], 165b01)
Book Ref
Aristotle: 'Sophistical Refutations, On the Cosmos etc (III)', ed/tr. Forster,E.S. /Furley,D.J. [Harvard Loeb 1955], p.15
2675 | Reasoning is a way of making statements which makes them lead on to other statements [Aristotle] |
2676 | Didactic argument starts from the principles of the subject, not from the opinions of the learner [Aristotle] |
2677 | Dialectic aims to start from generally accepted opinions, and lead to a contradiction [Aristotle] |
2674 | Competitive argument aims at refutation, fallacy, paradox, solecism or repetition [Aristotle] |
16967 | 'Are Coriscus and Callias at home?' sounds like a single question, but it isn't [Aristotle] |
16149 | Generic terms like 'man' are not substances, but qualities, relations, modes or some such thing [Aristotle] |
11840 | Only if two things are identical do they have the same attributes [Aristotle] |