Aristotle's model of communication focuses on the speaker delivering a speech to an audience in a one directional manner. The emphasis is on how the speaker organises the message to persuade listeners. There is little explicit attention to feedback from the audience. Therefore the process is best described as linear in nature.
Option A:
Linear communication involves a straight flow of messages from sender to receiver without a built in feedback loop. Aristotle's focus on rhetoric and persuasive speech matches this pattern. The model suits formal speeches where audience response is limited.
Option B:
Transactional models see communication as simultaneous mutual influence,which goes beyond Aristotle's one way emphasis. They highlight co creation of meaning rather than simple transmission. They therefore do not accurately describe Aristotle's basic view.
Option C:
Circular models such as Osgood Schramm represent repeated encoding and decoding cycles,where roles constantly shift. Aristotle did not depict this continuous loop in his simple diagram. Hence circular is not the best term here.
Option D:
Interactive models explicitly incorporate feedback as a separate stage,which is not highlighted in Aristotle's original formulation. They evolved later to address limitations of linear views. Thus interactive is not the correct choice.
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