Dialog
- This article treats dialog as process. For the literary Kind, to see Dialog (kind)
The dialog is a Communication between two or several people or groups of people. There must be at least a transmitting and a Récepteur. A transmitted data, it is the Message. A code, it is the Langue and/or the jargon. An objective, it is the goal of the message. It is done by signals (auditive or visual). The etymological origin Greek of the word refers to a translatable concept by " to follow a pensée" , which does not explain the way of taking it. ---- Unless wanting to thus take note of the spirit of the other it is enough to follow to seize.
Literature
The historians of the literature suppose that Plato introduced the concept of dialog into its texts, technique of writing which it preserved of his first career of dramatic author. He was also inspired for that by the sicilian poets , Sophron and Epicharmus which practiced it one half-century before.
Philosophy/Theology
Martin Buber place the dialog like an element prevailing with its philosophy: he sees the dialog like a means of entering in communication rather than an attempt to seek a conclusion or to express points of sights. In philosophy, to dialog is to think of two. The interreligieux Dialog makes it possible to work out a common religious point of view.
What the dialog is not
Many people succumb to art to oppose arguments against arguments. They believe to dialog whereas in fact, they do not take time to examine the subjects about which one speaks by distinguishing there the various arguments and the categories to which they are attached. They go to hunting to the Contradiction in the words employed: it is a quarrel much more than one dialog which they have between them.
See too
-
Communication and various models of communication
- Logical Conversation
- Cat
- of the dialog
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