Good Is In The Details
The discipline of rhetoric was the keystone of Western education for over two thousand years. We stopped teaching it. And it shows.
When most people hear the word "rhetoric" today, they use it as a synonym for manipulation; empty political speech, dishonest framing, words designed to obscure rather than illuminate. And in dismissing it that way, we've lost access to the most powerful intellectual tool we ever had for protecting ourselves from exactly that.
In this episode of Good Is In The Details, Gwendolyn Dolske and Rudy Salo sit down with Dr. Robin Reames, associate professor of English at the University of Illinois Chicago, specializing in rhetorical theory and the history of ideas, and author of The Ancient Art of Thinking For Yourself: The Power of Rhetoric in Polarized Times, named a New York Times Editors' Choice, recommended by the Wall Street Journal, and described by Kirkus as "required reading for any thinking person" in a starred review.
Dr. Reames's central argument is as urgent as it is counterintuitive: rhetoric doesn't teach us what to think. It teaches us how to think, allowing us to understand our own ideological commitments, and those of others, in a way that nothing else can. In a world of misinformation, conspiracy theories, and political acrimony, that is not an academic luxury. It is a survival skill.
What we explore in this episode:
Learning rhetoric, Dr. Reames argues, is about becoming a clearer thinker, one who can see how language is shaping their beliefs before it has already done so.
This is the episode for anyone who has ever lost a friendship over politics, consumed a news story and felt something was off but couldn't name it, or wondered how an entire country can look at the same facts and come to opposite conclusions.
The ancient Greeks had the same problem. And they found an answer.
Guest: Dr. Robin Reames — associate professor of English, University of Illinois Chicago. Author of The Ancient Art of Thinking For Yourself: The Power of Rhetoric in Polarized Times (Basic Books). New York Times Editors' Choice. Wall Street Journal recommendation. Kirkus starred review.
Learn more about Professor Reames and get her book: https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/contributor/robin-reames/?lens=basic-books
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