-
Ironism (n.
ironist; from Gr****: eiron, eironeia) is a term
coined by
Richard Rorty for the
concept that
allows rhetorical scholars to
actively parti****te...
-
deceptively presented by the
ironist." The
upper level is the
situation as it
appears to the
reader or the
ironist. The
ironist exploits a contradiction,...
- "axioms" set out in the
first three chapters. This
person is an
ironist. An "
ironist",
according to Rorty, is
someone who
fulfils three conditions: (1)...
-
justice on earth."
Habermas describes Rorty as an
ironist:
Nothing is
sacred to
Rorty the
ironist.
Asked at the end of his life
about the "holy", the...
-
Oxford University Press. pp. 165–190. Vlastos,
Gregory (1991). Socrates:
Ironist and
Moral Philosopher.
Cambridge University Press. Whitehead,
Alfred North...
-
ethical propositions.
There is a
widespread ****umption that
Socrates was an
ironist,
mostly based on the
depiction of
Socrates by
Plato and Aristotle. Socrates's...
- forgiveness".
Regarding conventional religion,
Blake was a
satirist and
ironist in his
viewpoints which are
illustrated and
summarised in his poem Vala...
- as
involving three types of characters: the
buffoon (bômolochus), the
ironist (eirōn), and the
imposter or
boaster (alazṓn). All
three are
central to...
- his
early work and
attempt to turn
himself into a Landor-style
social ironist.
Critics characterize his
middle work as
supple and
muscular in its rhythms...
-
imitation was near-perfect and that this
defeated his purpose,
arguing that an
ironist "should take care by a
constant exaggeration to make the
ridicule shine...