It also doesn’t lessen the value and the potential power of the example one sets for others.
Add:
'need to'
Between:
'doesn't' and 'lessen'
It also doesn’t lessen the value and the potential power of the example one sets for others.
Add:
'need to'
Between:
'doesn't' and 'lessen'
It migh
http://dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com/node/53
Replace
"It might provide..."
With:
"This fatalistic attitude..."
Hence rhetoric may be regarded as an offshoot of dialectic, and also of ethical (or political) studies.
of philosophical and of ethical or political studies
It is not right to pervert the judge by moving him to anger or envy or pity -- one might as well warp a carpenter's rule before using it.
Much as it is not the criminal defense lawyer's place to judge their client regardless of how guilty they are, it is not the doctor's place to force experimental treatment upon a patient regardless of how badly the research is needed, and it is not the priest's place to pass worldly judgement on their flock, it is not the programmer's place to try and decide whether the user is using the software in a "good" way or not.
Taking this to heart / putting it on my wall.
neglected all the good things which this study affords, and became nothing more than professors of meddlesomeness and greed
For they taught their art for a good purpose, to be used against enemies and evil-doers, in self-defence not in aggression, and others have perverted their instructions, and turned to a bad use their own strength and skill. But not on this account are the teachers bad, neither is the art in fault, or bad in itself; I should rather say that those who make a bad use of the art are to blame. And the same argument holds good of rhetoric; for the rhetorician can speak against all men and upon any subject,—in short, he can persuade the multitude better than any other man of anything which he pleases, but he should not therefore seek to defraud the physician or any other artist of his reputation merely because he has the power; he ought to use rhetoric fairly, as he would also use his athletic powers.
Ethics of rhetoric.