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The experimental psychology of attitude change and the tradition of classical rhetoric
MARLANA PORTOLANO
Towson University
RAND B. EVANS
East Carolina University
RAND B. EVANS, EDITOR
East Carolina University
Social psychologists
might be surprised to learn that their discipline has been cut off from
a vast and ancient family tree. The study of attitude change in the context
of experimental social psychology began around 1918. It developed into
a defined discipline in the 1930s and 1940s, particularly through the
work of Carl Hovland and his associates. Unlike earlier specialties in
experimental psychology, social psychology emerged well after the 19th-century
split between psychology and philosophy in college curricula. Before this
period of growth in empirical teaching and practice, the study of persuasion
in classical rhetoric was a bedrock of higher education for more than
2,000 years. Because of social psychology's late development in empirical
science, there is a historical disconnect between experimental social
psychology and its ancient philosophical counterpart, classical rhetoric.
This article demonstrates similarities and differences between Hovland's
findings and the theoretical groundings of classical rhetoric. We suggest
areas where modern social psychology might benefit from a look at the
older, more holistic theories of the art of rhetoric.
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