Harold Lasswell

Harold Dwight Lasswell (February 13, 1902December 18, 1978) was a leading political scientist and communications theorist. Along with other influential liberals of the period, such as Walter Lippmann, he argued that democracies needed propaganda to keep the uninformed citizenry in agreement with what the specialized class had determined was in their best interests. As he wrote in his entry on propaganda for the Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, we must put aside "democratic dogmatisms about men being the best judges of their own interests" since "men are often poor judges of their own interests, flitting from one alternative to the next without solid reason". http://zpedia.org/Propaganda_%28Encyclopaedia_of_the_Social_Sciences%29 He is well known for his comment on communications:
Who (says) What (to) Whom (in) What Channel (with) What Effect
Lasswell's model of communications is significantly different from those of engineers, including Claude Shannon, and his notion of channel is also different, since it includes different types of media. For example, newspapers, magazines, journals and books are all text media, but are assumed to have different distribution and readership, and hence different effects.

External links

Lasswell, Harold Lasswell, Harold

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
nipper
footprints (album)
castor cracking group
99y
uk lead
phantasy
tablet pc
waverley (novel)
farnham
bluebell wood
benasque
bebung
haverfordwest
severino antinori
data link layer
science museum (london)
portuguese man o' war
media object server
hexokinase
ashdown forest
kim dae jung
eutectic
euglenid
yorktown
kinetoplastid
ishim
oh, pretty woman
ian ure
bckeburg
rocky mount
pedal triangle
robert simson
delmar
del mar
davidson
sopwith camel
mount tambora
kenny mccormick
rehoboth
kudos
chuck mangione
reno (disambiguation)
monad
it's the great pumpkin, charlie brown