Abstract

A persuasion dialogue is a dialogue in which a conflict between agents with respect to their points of view arises at the beginning of the talk and the agents have the shared, global goal of resolving the conflict and at least one agent has the persuasive aim to convince the other party to accept an opposing point of view. I argue that the persuasive force of argument may have not only extreme values but also intermediate strength. That is, I wish to introduce two additional types of the effects of persuasion in addition to successful and unsuccessful ones (cf. Van Eemeren and Houtlosser in Argumentation 14(3):293–305, 2000; Advances in pragma-dialectics. Sic Sat, Amsterdam, 2002; Walton in A pragmatic theory of fallacy. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, 1995; Walton and Krabbe in Commitment in dialogue: basic concepts of interpersonal reasoning. State University of New York Press, Albany, New York, 1995). I propose a model which provides for modified versions of the standpoint of an agent needed in order to bring about two possible outcomes of a persuasion dialogue. These two outcomes I label partially-successful and over-successful. I call the potential, not yet verbalised, standpoint of an agent here the original topic t. Based on some aspects of relevance theory (Sperber and Wilson in Relevance: communication and cognition. Blackwell, Oxford, 1986; Wilson and Sperber in The handbook of pragmatics. Blackwell Publishing, Malden, 2006), I explain that the modified version of the original topic t is an implicature created from the original topic t and from a specific mental topic which belongs to, what I call the beneficial cognitive model (hence BCM). I define BCMi,t as a set of topics which are within the area of agent i’s interest of persuasion with respect to t.

Highlights

  • Actual communication practice is the point of departure for the model presented in this paper

  • The main aim of this paper was to offer a supplementary model which provides for two types of effects of persuasion: partially successful dialogue and over-successful dialogue

  • The proposed model introduces the notion of a modified version of the original topic t which helps to define these two types of effects of the persuasive force of argument

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Summary

Introduction

Actual communication practice is the point of departure for the model presented in this paper. The notion of a point of view is defined here in pragma-dialectical terms and is described as ‘‘a certain positive or negative position with respect to a proposition’’ (van Eemeren 2001: 17) Participants in this specific type of dialogue act as proponent and opponent. The main aim of this paper is to introduce a supplementary model which distinguishes types of persuasion effects in addition to the ones discussed in the pragma-dialectical critical discussion (van Eemeren and Houtlosser 2002; van Eemeren 2009) and the Waltonian persuasion dialogue (1995; Walton and Krabbe 1995) Both of those approaches allow the analyst to identify two types of effects: fully successful persuasion and fully unsuccessful persuasion.

Persuasive Aim in the Standard Models
Defining Partially and Over-Successful Persuasion Dialogues
Some Features of Partial and Over-Successful Persuasion Dialogues
Conclusion
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