Module 7 Blog

Fisher writes of his narrative paradigm “the narrative paradigm advances the idea that good communication is good by virtue of the fact of its’ satisfying the requirements of narrative rationality, namely, that it offers a reliable, trustworthy, and desirable guide to belief and action.” The metaphor suggests that arguments are a species of narrative, and that all narratives have a rational structure that can be analyzed and evaluated. I would have to agree with Fisher’s position of categorizing arguments as a species of narrative. Arguments, as we know them through rhetoric, are thought out, planned, and typically “battle-tested”. By this belief alone, if they are planned then they must follow a structure making it possible to analyze and evaluate, fitting right into Fisher’s metaphor. What that evaluation and analysis finds is a whole different subject, and one that could easily differ from one audience to the other based on their beliefs and values. Arguments are a form of narrative that has driven many facets of history and continues to be a consistent narrative in current times.


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