The Rhetoric of Intention in Human Affairs is an insightful account of
the rhetorical and psychological habits we exhibit when we must explain
the reasons others act. The assumption that we can know what motivates
another person is fed by more hope than certainty, and yet it is
evidence of a very human impulse. Beginning with a clear template for
defining various tiers of motives-talk, this innovative and accessible
study moves through a series of chapters exploring the unique demands
imposed by different circumstances. These sections cut a wide swath of
analysis across a diverse range of human actors including: conspiracy
theorists who find the designs of coordinated agents behind random
events, theater performers creating "backstories" for their characters,
journalists grasping to name the motives of newsmakers, prosecutors who
must establish another's intent in order to prove a criminal act, and
the devout who grapple with what divine intervention can mean in a cruel
world. Readers will recognize themselves in these pages, gaining an
appreciation for the rhetorical analysis of human behavior.