Dictionary Definition
apophasis n : mentioning something by saying it
will not be mentioned
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
apophasisExtensive Definition
Apophasis (Late
Latin, from Greek
apophanai, "to say no" ) refers, in general, to "mentioning by not
mentioning". Apophasis covers a wide variety of figures
of speech.
Apophasis
Apophasis was originally and more broadly a
method of logical reasoning or argument
by denial, a way of telling what something is by telling what it is
not, a process-of-elimination way of talking about something by
talking about what it is not.
A useful inductive
technique when given a limited universe of possibilities, the
exclusion of all but the one remaining is affirmation through negation. The familiar
guessing-game of "Is it bigger than a bread box?" is an example of
apophatic inquiry.
This sense has generally fallen into disuse and
is frequently overlooked, although it is still current in certain
contexts, such as mysticism and negative
theology. An apophatic
theology sees God as ineffable and attempts to
describe God in terms of what God is not. Apophatic statements
refer to transcendence in this context, as opposed to cataphasis
referring to immanence.
Paralipsis
Paralipsis, also known as praeteritio, preterition, cataphasis, antiphrasis, or parasiopesis, is a rhetorical figure of speech wherein the speaker or writer invokes a subject by denying that it should be invoked. As such, it can be seen as a rhetorical relative of irony. Paralipsis is usually employed to make a subversive ad hominem attack.The device is typically used to distance the
speaker from unfair claims, while still bringing them up. For
instance, a politician might say, "I don't even want to talk about
the allegations that my opponent is a drunk."
The most common English construction is the
phrase "not to mention," as in "She is talented, not to mention
rich." This construction is so common that it has lost much, if not
all, of the device's rhetorical power. "Not to mention" no longer
serves here as a device to separate the speaker from the claim of
richness, but is just another way of saying "and." Another is the
clause "if I don't say so myself" which is mistaken from the
affirmative "if I do say so myself," meant to show the speaker's
modesty.
Proslepsis is an extreme kind of paralipsis that
gives the full details of the acts one is claiming to pass over;
for example, "I will not stoop to mentioning the occasion last
winter when our esteemed opponent was found asleep in an alleyway
with an empty bottle of vodka still pressed to his lips."
Paralipsis was often used by Cicero in his
orations, such as "I will not even mention the fact that you
betrayed us in the Roman people by aiding Catiline."
Proslepsis
mainarticle prosleptic syllogism In logic, proslepsis, as described briefly by Aristotle and in detail by Theophrastus, is a type of proposition in which the middle term of a syllogism is implied. Such a syllogism is then described as a prosleptic syllogism, of which Theophrastus defined three kinds or figures.Expeditio
A famous Christological argument, commonly referred to as the Trilemma or Lewis Triumvirate, is an example of expeditio. Premised on Jesus Christ's claim to being the God, it posits that he is thus either a liar, a lunatic, or the Lord (that is, who he claims to be). The argument then attempts to systematically eliminate all the options except for Lord.Occultatio
Occultatio is a literary figure most often seen in plays, where a character describes a scene or object by not describing it. For example, in Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, act 4, scene 1, the character Grumio describes the eventful coming of his master and new wife to a young servant by saying,- Hadst thou not crossed me, thou shouldst have heard how her horse fell and she under her horse; thou shouldst have heard in how miry a place, how she was bemoiled,[...]with many things of worthy memory, which now shall die in oblivion and thou return unexperienced to thy grave.
H. P.
Lovecraft frequently used occultatio to add an element of
mystery to his stories, as his unfortunate protagonists met things
too horrible or too alien to describe.
References
- Greek Grammar
External links
- Figures of rhetoric: Apophasis
- A Handbook of Rhetorical Devices: Apophasis
- Wordsmith: Paralipsis
apophasis in German: Paralipse
apophasis in Spanish: Paralipsis
apophasis in French: Prétérition
apophasis in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Reticentia
apophasis in Dutch:
Paraleipsis