ABSTRACT

If one is looking for a model of the history of rhetoric in early modernity written as a history of decline, then one could do much worse than Bryan Garsten’s Saving Persuasion: A Defense of Rhetoric and Judgment, published in 2006. There the commonplace is repeated that, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, rhetoric came to be regarded with deep suspicion. And that is certainly true, at least in some sense. Almost despite himself, however, Garsten also succeeds in demonstrating that the criticisms of rhetoric developed by his synecdoches for early modernity – Hobbes, Rousseau and Kant – were not only attacks on rhetoric’s suspect duplicity but also creative reformulations of rhetorical issues and tactics of analysis. There are insights in Garsten’s account (not least the emphasis on Rousseau’s ‘persuading without convincing’), but I would argue that his mistake is quite simple and fundamental. Moreover, it is one that we repeat incessantly. He accepts the description of rhetoric as the art of persuasion – indeed submerges the discipline into ‘speech designed to persuade.’ 1 The better definition, however, is Aristotle’s: rhetoric’s ‘function is not so much to persuade, as to find out in each case the existing means of persuasion.’ Before – or instead of – being an art, rhetoric is thus a basic mode of humanistic inquiry. Dunamis not technē. 2