高级英语第五课love is a fallacy
合集下载
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
Logical fallacy:逻辑谬论 逻辑论证,即提出支持某些论题或结论的论据。 论证有两个部分组成:论点所支持的结论,与引 证结论的某些前提。而结论是经由前提所推导出 来的。当前提为结论提供确凿证据时,论据的演 绎推理便有效;反之则会成为谬论。成为谬误的 方式有三种:a内容,即事实陈述错误;b措词, 即术语使用错误;c结构(或形式),即推导过程 错误。那么,逻辑谬误可分为三类,即内容 (material)谬误,措词(verbal)谬误以及形 式(formal)谬误。
After his success with the Gillis character, Shulman continued to write. His humor column, "On Campus," was syndicated in over 350 collegiate newspapers at one point. A later novel, Anyone Got a Match?, satirized both the television and tobacco industries, as well as the South and college football. His last major successful project was his work on House Calls, which began as a 1978 movie based on one of his stories which starred Walter Matthau and Glenda Jackson, and later became a television series (1979–1981) starring Wayne Rogers and Lynn Redgrave in the same roles, for which he was the lead writer.
Shulman was also a screenwriter. He was one of the collaborators on a television documentary, Light's Diamond Jubilee, which was supposedly a celebration of the 75th anniversary of the invention of the light bulb by Thomas A. Edison, but which was in reality little more than a public relations piece for the electric industry, as its predecessor film, Light's Golden Jubilee, had been 25 years before
Ruskin:John Ruskin(1819-1900),British writer,art critic and social theorist.He considered a great paintng to be one that conveys great ideas to the viewer.During the mid-19th century Ruskin was the virtual of artistic opinion in England,but he has been treated harshly by 20th century critics.His works include MODERN PAINTERS(18431860),THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE(1849),SESAME AND LILIES(1865),THE CROWN OF WILD OLIVE(1866),TIME AND TIDE(1867),and FORS CLAVIGERA(8 vols,1871-1884)
Charles Lamb (1775-1834)
English essayist and critic who is now best
known for his "Essays of Elia" (1823,1833). He collaborated with his sister Mary in adapting Shakespeare's plays into stories for children. "Tales from Shakespeare" "Specimens of English Dramatic Poets"
Max Shulman (March 14, 1919–August 28, 1988) is a 20th century American writer best known for his television and short story character Dobie Gillis, as well as for best-selling novels. His writing often focused on young people, particularly in a collegiate setting. Shulman works include the novels Rally Round the Flag, Boys! and Sleep Till Noon. He was also a co-writer, with Robert Paul Smith, of the long-running Broadway play, The Tender Trap, starring Robert Preston, which was later made into a successful movie.
However, he is probably best remembered for his creation of the character "Dobie Gillis", who was the subject of a series of short stories compiled under the title, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, which became the basis for a CBS television series of the same name, and had previously been the subject of a film, The Affairs of Dobie Gillis (1953). Shulman was also the writer of the series' theme song. The same year that the series began, 1959, a novel continuing the adventures of Dobie and his friends, I Was a Teenage Dwarf, was published. (Its title was a takeoff on what is now seen as a "schlock horror" classic, I Was a Teenage Werewolf, starring Michael Landon.)
Thomas Carlyle ( 1795-188)
He produced Sartor Resartus 1833-34, the book in which he first developed his characteristic style and thought. This book is a veiled Sardonic (scornful 挖苦的) attack upon the shams and pretences of society, upon hollow rank, hollow officialism, hollow custom, out of which life and usefulness have departed. Carlyle developed a peculiar style of his own which was called --- "Carlyese" "Carlylism
Noቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱe About The Author
Name: Max Shulman Born: Mar 14, 1919 in St. Paul, Minnesota Died: Aug 28, 1988 in Los Angeles, California Occupation: Writer Active: '50s Major Genres: Comedy, Romance Career Highlights: House Calls, Rally 'round the Flag, Boys!, The Tender Trap First Major Screen Credit: Half a Hero (1953)
Mr. Shulman is survived by his wife, Mary; three sons, Daniel of Minneapolis, Max of Manhattan, and Peter, of Van Nuys, Calif.; two daughters, Martha, of London, and Melody, of Manhattan; seven grandchildren, and a sister, Esther Feldman, of St. Paul.
A prolific writer of satirical humor, Max Shulman was born in St.Paul, Minnesota, USA, the son of a Russian immigrant house painter, and began his writing career for the college humor magazine at the University of Minnesota. His work there came to the notice of a Doubleday editor, who encouraged the student to turn his best work into a novel, "Barefoot Boy With Cheek", which became a best-seller in 1943. After graduation, Shulman served in the US Army Air Corps, during which time he wrote two more novels, "The Feather Merchants", a comic novel about military life, and "The Zebra Derby", published after the war. After returning to civilian life, Shulman became a full-time writer, turning out a large quantity of novels, short stories, stage and screenplays and television scripts over the next four decades.