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ENTHYMEME

Volume 6 · 169 words · 1797 Edition

logic and rhetoric, an argument consisting only of two propositions, an antecedent, and a consequent deduced from it. The word is Greek, ἐνθυμημένης, formed of the verb ἐνθυμημαι, "to think, conceive," a compound of εν and θυμος, "mind."

The enthymeme is the most simple and elegant of all argumentations; being what a man, in arguing closely, commonly makes, without attending at all to the form. Thus, that verse remaining of Ovid's tragedy, intitled Medea, contains an enthymeme: "Savare potui, perdere an poffum rogat: "I was able to save you; consequently to have destroyed you." All the beauty would world have been lost, had all the propositions been expressed; the mind is displeased with a rehearsal of what is no ways necessary.

Sometimes, also, the two propositions of an enthymeme are both included in a single proposition, which Aristotle calls an enthymemal sentence, and gives this instance thereof: Mortal, do not bear an immortal hatred. The whole enthymeme would be, Thou art mortal; let not, therefore, thy hatred be immortal.