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Erschienen in: Argumentation 4/2021

13.01.2021 | Original Research

Affecting Argumentative Action: The Temporality of Decisive Emotion

verfasst von: Prins Marcus Valiant Lantz

Erschienen in: Argumentation | Ausgabe 4/2021

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Abstract

This paper explores the interrelations between temporality and emotion in rhetorical argumentation. It argues that in situations of uncertainty argumentation affects action via appeals that invoke emotion and thereby translate the distant past and future into the situated present. Using practical inferences, a threefold model for the interrelation of emotion and time in argumentation outlines how argumentative action depends on whether speakers provide reasons for the exigence that makes a decision necessary, the contingency of the decision, and the confidence required to act. Experiences and choices from the past influence the emotions experienced in the present and inform two intertemporal mechanisms that allow speakers and audiences to take the leap of faith that defines decision-making under uncertainty: retrospective forecasting and prospective remembering. Retrospective forecasting establishes a past–future–present link, whereas prospective remembering establishes a future-past-present link, and, together, the two mechanisms provide a situated presence that transcends the temporal constraints of uncertainty. Finally, the applicability of the model is illustrated through an analysis of a speech delivered by Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, a time where the need for decisive, yet argumentative action was crucial.

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Fußnoten
1
Unless otherwise stated, I have translated all quotes. Where necessary, I explain the reason for using a specific word. In this case, Abildgaard used the Danish word “tryg,” which in this context translates as “trust”. “Tryg” stems from Old Norse, “tryggr,” and German “true,” underlining the etymological connection with trust (Den Danske Ordbog 2020). One could also translate “tryg” as confident, because confidence stems from the Latin confīdere, that is “to put trust in, have confidence in, be sure.” (Merriam-Webster 2020).
 
2
In line with a well-established distinction within emotion research, I rely on affect as an umbrella term covering mood and emotion, in which emotions are discrete and intense but short-lived experiences, and moods are longer, more diffuse experiences that lack an awareness of the eliciting stimulus (Elfenbein 2007).
 
3
In a recent special issue of Argumentation on time and place (Tindale 2020), emotions play an insignificant role despite their role in practical argumentation that focuses on the future (e.g. Walton 1992, 1996; Tindale 2018, chapter 8; Kock 2017). However, see Cigada (2006) for a valuable exception as well as Macagno and Walton (2014, p. 68) for a brief mention in addition to Walton’s work on emotional appeals in relation to traditional fallacies (1997, 2013).
 
4
It is worth noticing that it does not, under all circumstances, hold true that demonstrations are out of time. When scientists (or lay people, for that sake) compare two valid demonstrations for the same problem, the shorter one is preferred in general because of Hjelmslev’s empirical principle in scientific discourse, which should meet, in the order, self-consistency, exhaustiveness, and simplicity (Garvin 1954) and an application of the Maxim of Relation (relevance) (Grice 1989, p. 27). I thank one of the reviewers for highlighting these important language philosophical aspects to me.
 
5
For further in-depth theorizing on the role and nature of emotion in argumentation, which the scope of the current paper does not allow for, see also Ben-Ze’ev (1995), Gilbert (2004), and Carozza (2007).
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Affecting Argumentative Action: The Temporality of Decisive Emotion
verfasst von
Prins Marcus Valiant Lantz
Publikationsdatum
13.01.2021
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Argumentation / Ausgabe 4/2021
Print ISSN: 0920-427X
Elektronische ISSN: 1572-8374
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10503-021-09546-2

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