2 inches from top of page to major heading (Major Heading) INTRODUCTION The enthymeme in rhetoric correlates to the syllogism in logic. Both have a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion. For analyzing argumentation, Toulmin has developed a system that accounts for the actual reasoning process better than the enthymeme. Figure 1 is an adapted illustration of his system. His method is not an outline of a discourse; instead, it represents the movement of thought underlying a discourse.
                                                                           



              Figure I.  Toulmin's analysis of argumentation                    

                                                                                

Data                        Therefore                       Claim               

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           Since ____________ Unless                                            

          Warrant            Rebuttal                                           

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          Because                                                               

          Backing                                                               

                                                                                

      SOURCE: Adapted from Toulmin, Argument, p. 111.                           

V ______________________________________________________________ A DYNAMIC REPLACEMENT FOR THE ENTHYMEMATIC MODEL OF ARGUMENTATION _Relationship_of_Enthymemes_to_Syllogisms_ Differences from Syllogisms An enthymeme differs from a syllogism in two principle areas. _First_. The rhetor frequently leaves out some portion of the enthymeme, a portion that seems self-evident to him. One seldom finds a full three point enthymeme in rhetoric. _Second_. An enthymeme involves probabilities rather than the deductive certainty of a syllogism, making the enthymeme more applicable to normal human discourse. Thus the enthymeme is more suited than the formal syllogism for analyzing the quasi-logical argumentation found in rhetoric (Perelman 230). 1 ________________________________________________________________ 2 Similarities to Syllogisms The enthymeme shares certain problems with they syllogism, problems that make the enthymeme inadequate as a model of argumentation. _Static_nature_ An enthymematic formulation is static in structure, while argumentation is dynamic. Audience concerns Most rhetors and audiences are more concerned with the material under consideration than they are with formal logic; enthymemes can detect flaws in logic, but are ill-equipped to deal with the problem of material validity. Formal logic produces little new knowledge and fails to represent adequately the human reasoning process. _Failure_to_Persuade_. The rhetor may be perfectly logical, but if he begins with a premise that the audience rejects, the argumentation fails. Although the enthymeme involves probabilities, its formulation is absolute, which makes determining the amount of contingency in an argument difficult. _Context_. Context is one element in the contingency of knowledge; people arrive at knowledge at a given time in their history and within a given situation. An enthymeme is a statement of knowledge in an timeless synchronic sense; it fails to reflect the diachronic limitations of contingent knowledge (Toulmin, Argument 7-17).