Shaping the Adversary Culture

Authors

  • Richard H. Gaskins

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v21i2.2242

Keywords:

adversary culture, Lionel Trilling, presumption, burden of proof, evidence-based reasoning, reflexive reasoning

Abstract

Our varied communities of discourse face a rhetorical future shaped by juridical styles reminiscent of the "adversary culture" postulated by post-war American critic Lionel Trilling. Itself the subject of litigious debate. the adversarial spirit today shows few signs of weakening, but its influence can be better understood and guided along certain tracks. To influence this adversarial style in coming decades, we need to explore the difference between evidencebased reasoning, which draws on the sensationalist logic ofinduction. and reflexive reasoning, which draws on the second-order logic of presumption. Understanding the structures and dynamics of this reflexive style forces us to address our responsibilities as speakers, as we seek to shape our rhetorical future. Close examination of adversarial contlict may lead us toward useful consensus on how the new game should be played.

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Published

2001-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles