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Democratic Theory and Public Opinion
Public opinion research has sometimes been
neglectful of both the political content of its
data and the extent to which it could vitalize
the theory of democratic politics. In this, his
Presidential Address before the seventh annual
convention of the American Association for
Public Opinion Research, Bernard Berelson
restates the fundamental requirements of a
democratic politic and points out how opinion
research can help a democracy to know itself,
evaluate its achievements, and bring its
practices more nearly in accord with its own
fundamental ideals. Mr. Berelson's interest in
this topic has de veloped out of, and is
expressed in, the Elmira study of opinion
formation during the Presi dential campaign of
1948. In the preparation of this paper, he has
benefited from discussions with Edward Shils,
his former colleague at the University of
Chicago, and from his reading of Mr. Shils'
manuscript on Consensus and Liberty: The
Social and Psychological Condi tions of Political
Democracy. At present, Mr. Berelson is
Director of the Behavioral Sciences Division of
the Ford Foun dation. J. HE field of public
opinion research has had a number of
intellectual godparents. Psychologists have
contributed their experience with attitude and
intelligence tests and measurements, as well as
substantive concepts and propositions.
Sociologists have provided experience with
field and community studies and ideas about
social structure and the place of opinion within
it. Market research has developed new
techniques and furnished a variety of practical
problems on which to try them. The
statisticians have worked on such problems as
sampling and scaling. But my subject is the
claim of political theory to contribute to the
character of public opinion research. It would
be too much to say that it has played no role
thus far. For a good many years the political
scientists have been discussing the nature of
public opinion and the role it plays in the
political process. But somehow, in recent years,
we have tended to overlook the related facts
that there is a political content in what we call
public opinion; that there exists a long and
elegant intellectual tradition (in the form of the
political theory of democracy) for dealing with
opinion problems; and that this theory
provides a helpful framework for the
organization and conduct of opinion studies.
The normative theory of political democracy
makes certain requirements of the citizen and
at AAPOR Member Access on March 8, 2016 3H
assumptions about his capacity to meet them.
The tools of social research have made it
possible, for the first time, to determine with
reasonable precision and objectivity the extent
to which the practice of politics by the citizens
of a democratic state conforms to the
requirements and the assumptions of the
theory of democratic politics (insofar as it
refers to decisions by the electorate). The
closer collaboration of political theorists and
opinion researchers should contribute new
problems, new categories, and greater
refinement and elaboration to both sides. The
theorists tell us how a democratic electorate is
supposed to behave and we public opinion
researchers claim to know something about
how the democratic electorate in this country
actually does behave. The task I have taken on
myself is figuratively to confront the one with
the other. Such an analysis should be useful not
only in organizing the results of opinion studies
in terms of an important body of theory, but
also in revealing neglected and promising areas
for further investigation. I bespeak the interest
of both theorists and researchers in extending,
refining, and, in general, improving this
formulation. For even on the basis of my
preliminary exploration, I am convinced that
each side has a good deal to learn from the
other and that joint work on this common
problem can be valuable both for social science
and for public policy. Such collaboration, like
most cross-disciplinary work, is not easy, but it
is necessary since neither side can solve the
problem alone. In this connection, the
deficiencies of the present formulation on the
theoretical side will be particularly clear to the
political theorist; I can only hope that the
representation of theory, drawn as it is from a
variety of sources, has not been caricatured,
and that the theorists will themselves
undertake the indicated corrections. What,
then, does democratic political theory assume
or require of the democratic citizen, and to
what extent are the assumptions or
requirements realized? There are a number of
ways of identifying and classifying the
requirements, depending upon which political
philosophers are given primary consideration.
It has seemed most appropriate in this
preliminary analysis to present a composite set
of requirements, even though they may
overlap at various points and thus not present
a coherent system. While not all of them may
be required in any singleDEMOCRATIC THEORY
AND PUBLIC OPINION 315 political theory of
democracy, all of them are mentioned in one
or another theory. THE PREREQUISITES OF
ELECTORATE DECISIONS There appear to be
two requirements in democratic theory which
refer primarily to characteristics demanded of
the electorate as it initially comes to make a
political decision. These are the preconditions
for electorate decisions. The first is the
possession of a suitable personality structure:
within a range of variations, the electorate is
required to possess the types of character
which can operate effectively, if not efficiently,
in a free society. Certain kinds of personality
structures are not congenial to a democratic
society, could not operate successfully within
it, and would be destructive of democratic
values. Others are more compatible with or
even disposed toward the effective
performance of the various roles which make
up the democratic political system. Among the
characteristics required—and diis is not
intended as anything more than an illustrative
list—are a capacity for involvement in
situations remote from one's face-to-face
experience; a capacity to accept moral
responsibility for choices; a capacity to accept
frustration in political affairs with equanimity;
self-control and self-restraint as reins upon the
gross operation of self-interest; a nice balance
between submissiveness and assertiveness; a
reasonable amount of freedom from anxiety so
that political affairs can be attended to; a
healthy and critical attitude toward authority; a
capacity for fairly broad and comprehensive
identifications; a fairly good measure of self-
esteem; and a sense of potency. The
distribution of such personality characteristics
in the population, let alone their relationship to
political behavior, is not known. What is more
or less known is only a beginning of the
problem. We know, for example, that contrary
to common belief the incidence of psychosis
has not increased in this country over the past
century (Goldhamer and Marshall); on this
score, at least, we are not less capable than
past generations of governing ourselves. We
know that the authoritarian personality is
associated with social prejudice and restrictive
politics (the Berkeley study of Adorno, Frenkel-
Brunswick, et «/.); that neuroticism limits
attention to political matters (Elmira study);
that a wide discrepancy between aspiration
and achievement leads some persons to over-
aggressive acts against the political
environment and316 PUBLIC OPINION
QUARTERLY, FALL 1952 lowers their respect for
political leaders (Bettelheim and Janowitz); that
the "democratic character" is more flexible and
adaptable than the authoritarian character
(Lewin and Lippitt). There is a great deal of
work to be done on this problem; and it is here
particularly that the psychologists can make an
important contribution to the study of political
behavior. The influence of character on political
democracy has been perceived in general
terms by a number of theorists, and some
psychologists and sociologists have begun to
work on the topic. The dependence of
democratic processes upon the "democratic
character" seems clear in general, but the
nature of diis relationship has been only slightly
documented in the literature. Without doubt, a
sympathetic and imaginative study of the
literature of democratic theory will generate
many important hypotheses for empirical
investigation. The second requirement is not
only a prerequisite but also an outcome of
electorate decisions. This is the factor of
interest and participation? the electorate is
required to possess a certain degree of
involvement in the process of political decision,
to take an appropriate share of responsibility.
Political democracy requires a fairly strong and
fairly continuous level of interest from a
minority, and from a larger body of the
citizenry a moderate-to-mild and discontinuous
interest but with a stable readiness to respond
in critical political situations. Political
disinterest or apathy is not permitted, or at
least not approved. Here the descriptive
documentation provided by opinion studies is
relatively good. The amount of political interest
in the community, its fluctuations through
time, its incidence among various population
groups, its causes and its consequences—on all
these topics we have reasonably systematic
data. Less than one-third of the electorate is
"really interested" in politics, and that group is
by no means a crosssection of the total
electorate. The more interested people are
more likely to affect others and thus to exercise
a greater influence upon the outcome of
elections. The decreasing political interest in
the population, viewed with alarm by some
people who are distressed by die fact that a
smaller proportion of eligible people vote now
than did fifty years ago, 1 Included here is
acceptance of the political sphere as one of the
legitimate elements of social life. In a
democratic society the political sphere must
not be widely viewed as unclean or degraded
or corrupt. Opinion studies have produced
some data on the image of politics and of
politicians among the citizenry.DEMOCRATIC
THEORY AND PUBLIC OPINION 317 is to some
extent due to the increasing feeling people
have that they are impotent to affect political
matters in the face of the complexity and
magnitude of the issues. Participation in the
actual election is not only segmental but also
partial; if everybody eligible to vote actually did
vote, the distribution of support in recent
national elections would have been measurably
different. Finally, interest is not a simple
unidimensional factor. A recent analysis
identified three kinds of interest: spectator
interest (regarding the campaign as a dramatic
spectacle); citizen interest (deciding how to
vote); and partisan interest (securing the
election of one's own candidate). Of these, only
the second is "pure" interest according to some
theorists. The major question raised by this
requirement, both for political theory and for
opinion research, is the fundamental one of its
universality and intensity. People have always
argued whether the vote is a duty or a
privilege, and there have always been
advocates of an unlimited and continuous
requirement of interest. As early as the
Athenian democracy it was said that "we
regard a man who takes no interest in public
affairs not as a harmless but as a useless
character." But is he really so useless to the
operation of democracy? Some recent theorists
and studies have suggested that a sizable group
of less interested citizens is desirable as a
"cushion" to absorb the intense action of highly
motivated partisans. For the fact is that the
highly interested are the most partisan and the
least changeable. If everyone in the community
were highly and continuously interested, the
possibilities of compromise and of gradual
solution of political problems might well be
lessened to the point of danger. It is an
historical axiom that democracy requires a
middle class for its proper operation. Perhaps
what it really requires is a body of moderately
and discontinuously interested citizens within
and across social classes, whose approval of or
at least acquiescence in political policies must
be secured. THE COMPONENTS OF
ELECTORATE DECISIONS The political theory of
democracy also makes requirements regarding
the components of electorate decisions; that is,
the content of the decision. The first
requirement of electorate decisions is the
possession of information and knowledge; the
electorate must be informed about the matters
under consideration. Information refers to
isolatedi8 PUBLIC OPINION QUARTERLY, FALL
1952 3 facts and knowledge to general
propositions; both of them provide reliable
insight into the consequences of the decision.
This is a requirement nearly everyone sets
down for a democratic electorate; politicians
and statesmen, adult educators, journalists,
professors of political science—all of them pay
deference to the need for "enlightened public
opinion." This is another factor on which
opinion researchers have assembled a good
deal of data. What do they show ? One
persistent conclusion is that the public is not
particularly well informed about the specific
issues of the day. A recent survey of the
current status of American public opinion
states that "tests of information invariably
show at least twenty per cent of the public
totally uninformed (and usually the figure is
closer to forty per cent)." And at that, most of
the studies have been based upon simple and
isolated questions of fact (i.e., information) and
only seldom, if at all, upon the historical and
general propositions (i.e., knowledge) which
underlie political decisions. Perhaps the
proportion of the knowledgeable would be
even lower than the proportion of the
informed. At the same time, it must be
recognized that there is a significant middle
ground—a kind of vaguely perceived
impression which reveals to the possessor
certain relationships which are very "real" to
him, which form "reasonable" bases for his
decision, yet which cannot be explicitly
articulated by him in any detail. An obvious
example is the difference between die
Republican and Democratic parties, a
difference visible to many partisans of both.
Thus it often appears that people express
opinions on issues when they seem to know
very little about them. Lack of information may
be a bar to the holding of an opinion in the
minds of the theorists but it does not seem to
be among the electorate (where, of course, it is
not experienced as lack of information at all). In
most campaigns, whether political or
informational, the people best informed on the
issue are the ones least likely to change their
minds. Much of diis represents attitudinal
stability; some of it may represent rigidity.
Information and knowledge are required of the
electorate on the assumption that they
contribute to the wisdom of the decision;
informed citizens make wiser decisions. In diis
country it is clear that the better-educated
people are die best informed and most
knowledgeable, yet it is also clear that other
variables are involved in the development of
wise decisions, e.g., flexibility of
predispositions, a wide range ofDEMOCRATIC
THEORY AND PUBLIC OPINION 319
identifications, a low level of aggressiveness,
etc. Finally, it appears from most studies that
information and knowledge are sought and
used more often as rationalization and
reinforcer than as data to be used in making
what might be called a free decision. The
requirement thus does not seem to be met in
any direct way. But this is really an
oversimplified statement of the requirement.
How can an electorate be expected to be
informed on the wide range of issues which
confront the modern public? For example, the
front page of The New Yor\ Times for one day
alone recently contained stories on the
following events, in each of which is embedded
an issue on which the public might be expected
to inform itself: price ceilings, the Korean war
and the British position in it, the American
defense buildup, Communist riots in France,
the Berlin crisis, a new disarmament proposal,
American military aid to France, official Soviet
spies in this country, and the Mutual Security
Aid Bill. Clearly there is too little time for simply
getting the relevant information, let alone
digesting it into a generalized system of
political opinions. Actually the major decisions
the ordinary citizen is called upon to make in a
modern representative democracy involve
basic simplifications which need not rest upon
a wide range of information so long as they are
based upon a certain amount of crucial
information, reasonably interpreted. After all,
the voter's effective choice is limited; he can
vote Republican, he can vote Democratic, or he
can refrain from voting, and becoming
informed on a number of minor issues usually
does not tip the scales against the weight of
the few things that really matter—
employment, social security, the cost of living,
peace. If the theoretical requirement is "full"
information and knowledge, then democratic
practice does not conform. But for some
theorists the requirement is more
differentiated than that. Representative
government with large-scale political
organization does not require that everyone be
equally informed on everything all the time. To
such a differentiated standard, actual practice
may conform reasonably well. Opinion studies
should not only document this requirement,
but also refine their inquiries into die actual
ways in which information and knowledge are
held and used by the citizen in his vote
decision. At the same time, theorists should
differentiate and elaborate their conceptions of
the intellectual requirements for a democratic
citizenry.320 PUBLIC OPINION QUARTERLY,
FALL 1952 The second component required of
decisions is the possession of principle; the
electorate is required to possess a body of
stable political principle or moral standards, in
contrast with fluctuating impulses or whims, to
which topical questions can be referred for
evaluation and decision. Such principles are of
two kinds. In the first place, there are the
principles which refer to democratic
procedures (as distinguished from the content
of democratic decisions) and on them there
must be consensus. Everyone, or nearly
everyone, must agree on the rules of the
political game and accept them in advance of
the controversy so diat they will obtain even in
defeat. Among such principles are the rules
that violence must not be involved in the
making of electoral decisions; that the majority
decision must be accepted as final in any
particular instance, until legitimately appealed
to a court, a legislative body, or the citizenry;
that the citizen must have due respect for
constituted authority; that the citizen must
share respect with other parts of the
community and thus be ready for political
compromise. Few data on such questions have
been collected in opinion studies, perhaps
because their wide observance seems so
obvious. It would be instructive to describe
more precisely the citizenry's image of
desirable and actual processes of democracy
and to analyze the factors responsible for it.
The other kind of principle refers to the
substantive bases of political decisions—the
underlying moral or political ends in terms of
which particular issues are determined at
particular times. Just what they are for
different parts of the population is difficult to
say in the absence of more systematic research
devoted to this purpose. At this time, however,
it would seem at least likely that the same
avowed principles underlie political positions at
every point on the continuum from left to right.
Full employment, a high standard of living,
freedom, a better life for one's children,
peace—these are the types of answers we have
now, and we get them from persons of every
political persuasion. Now this is not so empty
as it sounds. Democratic theorists have pointed
out what is often overlooked because too
visible, namely, that an effective democracy
must rest upon a body of political and moral
consensus. If splits in the population are too
sharp or too great, democratic processes
cannot be maintained because of actual,
threatened, or suspected conflict among
partisans. In this circumstance, a seeming
consensus which is accepted at its face value is
far better than no conDownloaded from
http://poq.oxfordjournals.org/ at AAPOR
Member Access on March 8, 2016DEMOCRATIC
THEORY AND PUBLIC OPINION 321 sensus—
and a seeming consensus is sometimes
reflected in loyalty to the same symbols even
though they carry different meanings. A sense
of homogeneity is often an efficient substitute
for the fact of homogeneity. Thus it is not an
empty assertion to say that the role of
substantive principles—like that of some
information—is both to rationalize and to guide
the choice simultaneously. Rationalization has
a social function, too. What this means, then, is
that the selection of means to reach agreed-
upon ends is more likely to divide the
electorate than the selection of the ends
themselves. At the same time, however, the
principles must be applicable to current
political life. Political decisions made today in
the light of principles which support or oppose
the major social reforms identified as the "New
Deal" or the "welfare state" are relevant. But
decisions made simply in conformity to an
historical regional loyalty or to a primary group
loyalty are of dubious relevance; and those
made only in conformity to an ancestral loyalty
or a religious loyalty are of no relevance at all.
When theorists insist that public decisions in a
democracy must be based upon principle and
doctrine, they mean principle and doctrine
which can confront and cope with the major
problems of the age. Yet the studies show that
a large proportion of the party vote today is by
this test unprincipled. If it is nothing more,
then, the requirement of principle or doctrine
means that the electorate must genuinely
accept the procedures and rules involved in
democratic processes, that it must at least
share the symbols describing the substantive
ends to which political action is directed and in
terms of which it is justified, and that it must
make political decisions on the basis of relevant
standards. The first two requirements are met
to a greater extent than the third. THE
PROCESS OF ELECTORATE DECISION The third
set of essentials in democratic theory refers to
the process by which decisions are made. Here
there seem to be three requirements. The first
of the requirement relates to the process of
perception of which information and
knowledge are the end products. This is the
requirement of accurate observation; the
electorate is required to perceive political
realities clearly and objectively, with an
absence or only a small amount of subjective
distortion. It is difficult indeed to see life
steadily and see it whole, and in politics clarity
of perception is made322 PUBLIC OPINION
QUARTERLY, FALL 1952 doubly hard on the one
hand by the predispositional strength which
the citizen brings to the matter and, on the
other, by the deliberate and in many cases
inevitable ambiguity which the political leader
brings there. There is no need to labor this
point. Walter Lippmann made a reputation for
himself thirty years ago by elaborating the
differences between the "world outside and
the pictures in our heads." For the most part,
he said, "we do not first see and then define,
we define first and then see." Recent studies
provide some documentation which refines this
general observation. According to data from
the Elmira study, not only is the citizen's image
of the candidate and the campaign subject to
the influence of preconception, but so is his
view of group support for the candidates and
even of the candidates' stand on political
issues. Given just a minimum of ambiguity to
work with—and that is usually available—
people tend to think their candidate agrees
with them, or at least they manage not to know
where he stands on the particular issue when
they stand on the other side. The stronger the
party affiliation, the greater the misperception.
The consequences of such misperception are
interesting to speculate about. It seems to
decrease the tension within the individual since
it enables him to bring his opinions into an
internal consistency without disturbing his
basic position. At the same time, it increases
the internal solidarity of the parties and thus
increases political tension within the
community by seeming to sharpen the
differences between the parties, particularly
under the stress of a political campaign. Thus
political perception is by no means simply a
matter of concrete observation; it also involves
protective coloration from a total position. And
hence, that democratic theory which assumes
clarity and objectivity of political perception
must be qualified at the outset. The second
important requirement of democratic process
is communication and discussion; the
electorate is required to engage in discussion
and communication on political affairs.
Democratic decisionmaking requires free
examination of political ideas, and this means
discussion. Democratic citizens are supposed to
listen to their political leaders arguing with one
another, to listen to them when they speak
directly to the electorate, to talk back to them,
and to discuss among themselves the public
issues of the day. According to many modern
theorists, this requirement stands at the heart
of the democratic process.DEMOCRATIC
THEORY AND PUBLIC OPINION 323 "Above all,
if it is to be true to its own peculiar nature,
democracy must enlist the effective thought of
the whole community in the operation of
discussion." Now here again, as in the case of
information, public opinion researchers have
assembled a sizable body of data, not only on
the amount and kind of communication and
discussion within the community but also on
the conditions under which it takes place. The
overall picture presented by the opinion
studies looks something like this: There is a 20
per cent nucleus of people who are active and
regular political discussants, another group of
25 per cent who engage in political discussion
on occasion, another 25 per cent who are
activated into discussion only by dramatic
political events, and a residual group of 25 or
30 per cent who do not engage in political
discussion at all. Furthermore, it is particular
groups within the community that give most
attention to politics: the better-educated, the
men, the "joiners"—in short, those groups
most subject to social pressure translated into
expectations of how "our kind of people"
should behave in this respect. And the people
who read and listen to political content in the
mass media also talk and listen to other people,
and thus the concentration of political
communication and discussion is carried one
step further. To complete the picture we need
to ask two other questions which together
bring into consideration another aspect of this
requirement. Democratic citizens are required
not simply to discuss politics, but to discuss
political alternatives in a genuine effort to
clarify and refine public policy. The first
question is, "Who talks to whom?", and the
answer is that people mostly discuss politics
with other people like themselves—"like" in
such characteristics as social position,
occupation, and attitude. Mainly this goes on
inside the family, but even outside it there is a
clear tendency for political discussions to be
carried out intra- rather than inter-social
groups. The second question is, "What do they
see and hear and talk about?" The broad
answer is, "What pleases them"; i.e., what is
congenial to their own point of view. People
usually read and listen to their own side. In
person-to-person discussion of politics, about a
third or more of the talk centers upon topics
not directly involving political preferences—for
example, predictions of and arguments about
who will win an election—and the remainder
consists overwhelmingly of exchange of
mutually agreeable remarks. What this all
means—and this is clearly documented—is that
the people PUBLIC OPINION QUARTERLY, FALL
1952 324 who do the most reading and
listening and talking are the people who
change their minds the least. Lowell did not say
it first but he said it well: "To a great extent,
people hear what they want to hear and see
what they want to see. They associate by
preference with people who think as they do,
enter freely into conversation with them, and
avoid with others topics that are controversial,
irritating or unpleasant. This is not less true of
what they read. To most people, that which
runs counter to their ideas is disagreeable, and
sought only from a sense of duty." In summary,
then, genuine political discussion—not
acrimonious argumentation on the one hand or
mutual admiration for right thinking on the
other, but free and open discussion devoted to
finding a solution to a problem through the
clarification and modification of views—this is
not marked by its magnitude. Perhaps it is
naive to point this out once more; perhaps it is
naive to require it in the first place. We cannot
inquire here into what the requirement of
discussion can really mean in a modern
democracy; whether self-interested argument
is improper, whether genuine discussion goes
on a different level in the political process. But
certainly democratic practice does not conform
fully to the requirements of some theorists:
"The person or party formulating political
principles or policies in advance of discussion,
and refusing to compromise under any
circumstances; or settling such principles or
policies before the process of discussion is
completed and refusing to compromise further;
renders discussion a farce in the first place, and
in the second, limits its usefulness." The third
requirement under process is rationality; the
electorate is required to exercise rational
judgment in political decisions. Philosophers
and economists still talk professionally about
"rational behavior," but sociologists never
really used the concept, psychologists have
given it up, and political scientists seem to be in
process of doing so. The problem of giving the
term a clear meaning acceptable to others is
partly responsible for this state of affairs. The
term, says a recent writer on rational conduct,
"has enjoyed a long history which has
bequeathed to it a legacy of ambiguity and
confusion. Any man may be excused when he is
puzzled by the question how he ought to use
the word and in particular how he ought to use
it in relation to human conduct and to politics."
The difficulty, of course, is not that there is no
reasonably clearDEMOCRATIC THEORY AND
PUBLIC OPINION 325 definition for the term
but that there are several definitions describing
several different kinds of rationality. And the
conformity of democratic practice varies with
each definition. Let us review a few major
meanings and their relationship to democratic
practice. In the first place, we may distinguish
between the rational decision as outcome and
the rational decision as process. In the former
case we speak of rationality as equivalent to a
"right" decision. This assumes that there is one
right answer to every problem, and that the
power of reason can arrive at truths of policy
which should be evident to all—all, that is,
except those ruled by prejudice or emotion.
When this is not simply a euphemism for
describing decisions of which we approve, it
presumably refers to a decision taken in
conformity with an estimate of desirable ends
(it thus assumes a valid analysis of whose
interest lies where) and also in conformity with
a correct estimate of which means will achieve
the given ends. If we leave determination of
self-interest up to the individual involved, then
virtually all electorate decisions are rational by
this definition; if we leave it up to the
"objective observer" then the proportion will
vary arbitrarily with his estimate of the present
situation and the future. Even in philosophy,
this meaning appears to be so ambiguous that
it is difficult to see how we can design empirical
research to test the extent of its observance by
the electorate. If we take rationality as
referring to the process of decision—a more
likely definition—then various possibilities are
available. One meaning requires a certain
independence of the rational process from the
influence of predispositions broadly defined.
Here rationality becomes the "free decision"—
free from coercive imposition; free from
blinding institutional loyalties; free from
personal position (such as class or race); free
from passions and impulses; free, in short,
from any distorting or distracting pressures
which prevent clear observation and calm,
sober reflection. Here the term refers to
logical, syllogistic ratiocination. But this seems
to be an impractical, untenable, undesirable,
and quite unreasonable definition; it takes the
content heart out of politics and leaves the
voter with no real basis on which to evaluate
political proposals. By this standard, at least in
its extreme version, there are almost no
rational voters. As a social philosopher says,
"individuals who on their own initiative form or
change their fundamental beliefs through
genuine critical reflection are so rare that they
may be classed as abnormal."326 PUBLIC
OPINION QUARTERLY, FALL 1952 A second
meaning of rationality is close to, if not
identical with, our requirement of information
and knowledge: the voter should be aware of
the correct state of public affairs at the present
and of the "reasonable" consequences of
alternative proposals for action. By this
definition someone who made up his political
mind on the basis of ends for which there are
no present means of attainment would be
making a non-rational decision, and so would
the person whose estimates of the present
situation or of the future were wrong. Also by
this meaning the voter should be capable of
indicating some relevant grounds for his
decision, and most voters can cite such
grounds. Here we meet the difficult question of
rationalization, as against rationality, but we
can suggest a partial answer. Rationality is
limited by the individual's incapacity to deal
with the real world in all its complexity, so it
must allow for the legitimacy of dealing with
simplified models of reality. In politics, the
voter may "really" decide on the basis of one or
two issues which are dominant for him (for
example, peace or the New Deal) and use other
issues as reinforcing rationalizations (for
example, the military background of a
candidate or corruption in the Federal
administration). A third definition requires the
presence of convincibility or openmindedness
in consideration of political issues. This does
not require the citizen to change his mind but
only to be genuinely open to a change of mind.
Here the time involved seems crucial. If this
means, for example, that the citizen should be
open-minded between June and November of
an election year, then probably fewer than half
the electorate is rational, and very few indeed
in the South and parts of New England. If it
includes the four years of a presidential
administration or the "natural history" of a
major political issue, from birth in controversy
to death in near-unanimity, then the figure
would become quite higher. It is hard for the
researcher to be more specific because of the
difficulty of determining just when "genuine
consideration," as against rationalization, goes
on. Still another meaning of rationality as
process requires that the decision be made in a
state of low psychic tension; that is, that the
decision not be an emotional one but be
marked by a certain amount of detachment
and freedom from passion. This poses a nice
democratic dilemma; the people most rational
by this definition are the people least
interested in the political process and least
involved in its outcome.DEMOCRATIC THEORY
AND PUBLIC OPINION 327 The more interested
people are the more emotional, in this sense,
and the least detached; they are the ones who
ascribe important consequences to the
outcome of the decision and thus find enough
psychic energy to be active about the matter.
Here the rational voter is the independent
voter, that is, the one without sufficient
interest or investment in the election to get
excited about it. Still other meanings are
available. There is the meaning in which
rationality refers to the presence of
deliberately directed behavior to consciously
formulated purposes. Here again, almost all
voters could qualify. There is the meaning in
which rationality refers to a choice of behavior
that is optimal in some sense, and this
definition can be readily satisfied on the
grounds of a subjective optimum if nothing
more. There is the meaning in which a rational
decision is a self-consistent decision. There are
undoubtedly other meanings. If it is not easy to
say what is meant by a rational decision, it is
somewhat easier to say what is not meant by
it. A rational decision is not a capricious
decision, or an impulsive one, or an
unprincipled one, or a decision guided by
custom or habit or tradition or sentiment
alone. But the central problem is to relate the
demand of rationality to the analysis of
decision-making in terms of such
sociopsychological concepts as the reference
group; that is, to see the "rational decision" as
imbedded in a social context which limits it at
the same time that it gives it political meaning.
While the types of rationality are not easy to
define and while they are certainly never
present in a pure or extreme form, they can be
isolated empirically, clarified, and investigated
as to their frequency, their functions, and their
preconditions. THE OUTCOME OF ELECTORATE
DECISIONS Finally, there is one basic
requirement which might be included under
the need for principle but which seems to
deserve independent treatment in view of its
central importance with reference to the
outcome of the decision. This is the
requirement of community interest; the
electorate is supposed to come to political
decisions on consideration of the common
good rather than, or in addition to, self-
interest. In several formulations of democratic
theory, the electorate is required to devote
thought to what is good for the community as a
whole instead of relying exclusively upon
calculation of what is good for oneself or one's
own group. The classical formulation comes
from328 PUBLIC OPINION QUARTERLY, FALL
1952 John Stuart Mill: "In any political election .
. . the voter is under an absolute moral
obligation to consider the interests of the
public, not his private advantage, and give his
vote, to the best of his judgment, exactly as he
would be bound to do if he were the sole voter,
and the election depended upon him alone."
Now here again the problem of definition is a
central one. How is the researcher to
distinguish between honest conclusion and
forced rationalization, as in the slogan, "What's
good for me is good for the country"? How
distinguish the "immediate and apparent
interest" from the "ultimate and real interest"?
Does self-interest refer only to the criterion of
direct self-gain or to that of benefit to one's
group or class, and over what period of time?
Does community interest refer to agreement
on procedures, or to an outside criterion (and if
so, what), or to the residual decision after the
various self-interests have balanced themselves
out, or to genuine concern for other groups, or
to restraint upon self-interest, or to deviation
from the predominant vote of one's group? The
more one looks into the matter, the more it
appears that one man's self-interest is another
man's community interest, and that many
people sincerely identify the one widi the
odier. Nor have the theorists overlooked this.
"Men come easily to believe that arrangements
agreeable to themselves are beneficial to
others," said Dicey. "A man's interest gives a
bias to his judgment far oftener than it corrupts
his heart." And from Schumpeter: "To different
individuals and groups the common good is
bound to mean different things. This fact,
hidden from the utilitarian by the narrowness
of his outlook on the world of human
valuations, will introduce rifts on questions of
principle which cannot be reconciled by
rational argument." In a current study of
opinion formation (the Elmira study), we
concluded that it is more satisfactory to
analyze this question in terms of the forces
making for political cleavage and political
consensus within the community. The health of
a democratic order depends on achieving a
nice balance between them: enough cleavage
to stimulate debate and action, enough
consensus to hold the society together even
under strain. Political parties in a democracy
should disagree—but not too much, too
sharply, nor too fundamentally. The evidences
of cleavage are clear to everyone. Cleavage
along class and religious and regional lines in
addition to direct attitudinal differences on
basic issues of foreign and domestic policy—
these are so familiar as to require
noDEMOCRATIC THEORY AND PUBLIC OPINION
329 elaboration. At the same time there are
important evidences of consensus, of political
cohesion, which deserve more attention than
they usually get. In the first place, there is the
basic fact that group memberships and
identifications overlap political choices; sizable
political minorities are found in various social
groups and this provides a kind of glue to hold
the community together. In addition, even at
the height of a presidential campaign there are
sizable attitudinal minorities within each party
and each social group on political issues, and
thus sizable attitudinal agreements across
party and group lines. Such overlappings link
various groups together and prevent their
further estrangement. All of this means that
democratic politics in this country is happily not
total politics—a situation where politics is the
single or central selector and rejector, where
other social differences are drawn on top of
political lines. Cross-pressures in political
allegiances, based upon a pluralistic system of
values, are thus highly important to the society.
So the question of self and community interest
may best be seen as the question of cleavage
and consensus. The multiplicity and the
heterogeneity of identifications and
associations in the great society develop an
overlapping, pluralistic social organization
which both sharpens and softens the impact
and the consequences of political activity.
CONCIAJSION The political theory of
democracy, then, requires that the electorate
possess appropriate personality structures,
that it be interested and participate in public
affairs, that it be informed, that it be
principled, that it correctly perceive political
realities, that it engage in discussion, that it
judge rationally, and that it consider the
community interest. Now this combination of
requirements sets a high—an ideal— standard
for the political process. And since this is a
composite list, from a variety of sources, it is
not necessarily a matter for disillusionment or
even disappointment that the democratic
electorate does not conform to every
requirement in the full degree. There is always
an appropriate observation from Lord Bryce:
"Orthodox political theory assumes that every
citizen has, or ought to have, thought out for
himself certain opinions, for example, ought to
have a definite view, defensible by arguments,
of what the country needs, what principles
ought to be applied in governing it, of the men
to whose hands330 PUBLIC OPINION
QUARTERLY, FALL 1952 the government ought
to be entrusted. There are persons who talk,
though certainly very few who act, as if they
believed this theory, which may be compared
to the theory of some ultra-Protestants that
every good Christian has or ought to have, by
the strength of his own reason, worked out for
himself from the Bible a system of theology."
Opinion studies in recent years have done
much to fill in the picture of what actually
happens in democratic decision-making. As is
evident even from this brief survey, they have
done so in three ways: first, by documenting
the theoretical assumptions with facts about
actual political behavior; second, by clarifying
the concepts and assumptions of democratic
theory, if in no other way simply by insisting
upon researchable formulations; and third, by
differentiating and reformulating the general
theoretical propositions in more exact terms.
Further systematic exploration of this subject
within a sharper, more valid, and more
sophisticated framework of political theory
should make a rich contribution to each side.
The difficulties of collaboration between
political theorists on the one hand and opinion
researchers on the other must not be allowed
to stand in the way of joint work, for the
theorists can provide a systematic statement in
terms of which public opinion studies can be
meaningfully organized, and the empirical
researchers can document the theoretical
requirements. The theorists can suggest new
concepts and hypotheses to the researcher,
and the researcher can force the theorists to
sharpen and differentiate—yes, and quantify—
their formulations. Of course there are
problems but they should be negotiated or
overcome. For example, the theorists tend to
use descriptive categories (e.g., rationality) and
the researchers prefer predictive categories
(e.g., group memberships) in "explaining"
political preferences. Hard and joint thinking on
such problems should bring returns. The
investigation of the realities of democratic
processes at the level of the electorate is a
useful service and it should be carried forward.
Opinion studies can help a democracy not only
to know itself in a topical and immediate way
but also to evaluate its achievement and its
progress in more general terms. In this
framework, the study of public opinion can
make a telling contribution in the basic,
continuous struggle to bring democratic
practice more and more into harmony with the
requirements and the assumptions—that is,
with the ideals—of democratic theory.
Understanding Public Opinion in Social
Science Research
Understanding Public Opinion in Social Science
Research. The concept of public opinion,
deeply rooted in historical origins and evolving
through centuries, has been a subject of
scholarly debate. This paper traces the
historical development of the term 'public
opinion' from its early connotations to its
current complexities, exploring its
conceptualization, evolution, and debates.
Scholars' perspectives, ranging from Rousseau
to Locke and anti-democratic thinkers like Plato
and Aristotle constitute are discussed to
understand the meaning and evolution of the
term public opinion. The objective of this paper
is to explore the meaning, type and essence
what constitute the term ‘public’ and ‘opinion’.
It majorly relies on the work of Price to
understand the how the term public and
opinion are constituted and evolved in the
democratic societies and also distinguishes
how the term opinion and attitude in the larger
spectrum. Elaborating the formation of opinion
this paper explores the role of schemata,
values, and group identification. Furthermore,
it also demonstrates the impact of immediate
stimuli in social settings on the expression of
opinions, highlighting the dynamic nature of
opinion formation. The last part of the paper
highlights conceptualization of ‘Public Opinion’,
its historical and contextual evolution since
18th century and the influence of intellectuals
such as Madison, Bentham, and Mill. It also
emphasizes the role of American Association
for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) in the
development of the discipline of public opinion
across the regions in 20th century. Finally this
paper highlights the relevance of public opinion
research in the contemporary democratic
settings and challenges in pursuing objectivity
in this domain. Methodologically this paper
relies on exploratory and comparative analysis.
I. INTRODUCTION Public opinion, a pivotal
concept in the realm of social sciences, traces
its historical roots to the era of Rousseau,
gaining prominence with the advent of survey
research in the early 19th century. The
definition of public opinion remains a subject of
scholarly contention, with Childs (1939)
characterizing it as "a simple aggregation of
individual views" (Price 1992, p. 2). The
historical antecedents of the concept, however,
diverge from ancient Greek political thought,
where the collective or aggregative perspective
was marginalized and criticized by luminaries
such as Plato and Aristotle. Their anti-
democratic stance posited that expert opinions
superseded those of the masses, viewing the
amalgamation of 'public' and 'opinion' as
yielding either common sense or nonsense.
Vincent Price notes that it was only during the
liberal and democratic philosophies of the
1700s that attempts were made to reconcile
these terms in a different light (Price 1992, p.
6). Locke, in particular, imbued the term
'opinion' with significance, aligning it with
expert views, a departure from the ancient
Greek philosophers' interpretation. The term
'public,' on the other hand, has undergone
various historical interpretations, often aligning
with the collective will of the people. Price
elucidates that the term 'public' originally
connoted both 'of the people' (referring to
common access) and 'for the people' (referring
to the common good), evolving over time to
signify 'by the people' (carried out by the
common people, as understood today) (Price
1992, p. 8). Thus, 'public' and 'opinion' exhibit
distinct conceptual and historical trajectories,
with the amalgamation into 'public opinion'
receiving academic attention only in the first
half of the 20th century. To unravel the
historical development of the concept of
'public opinion,' a comprehensive exploration
of the evolution, conceptualization, and
debates surrounding the terms 'public' and
'opinion' becomes imperative. II. THE
CONCEPTION OF PUBLIC The notion of public
has been scrutinized through various lenses,
including crowd, mob, citizen, people, mass,
and group. In public opinion research, the
categorization of the public varies based on
research objectives, methods, and contexts.
Some view the public as the entire
geographical population, while others restrict it
to those informed about a specific issue.
Further distinctions emerge concerning
religion, caste, gender, region, or other identity
parameters. Vincent Price identifies several
types of public, one being the 'General Public.'
Allport's (1937) definition, as highlighted by
Price, characterizes the general public as "a
population defined by geographical,
community, political jurisdiction, or other
limits" (Price 1992, p. 36). This encompassing
definition, dominating societal and academic
discourse, has faced challenges. Scholars like
Gallup, Roper, Archibald, and Price advocate
for an inclusive approach, considering all
members of society in a populist and
democratic manner. In contrast, Bryce,
Lippmann, Neuman, and Key argue that not all
individuals are sufficiently informed or
potential respondents for research on specific
issues (Price 1992, Pp. 36-37). www.ijisrt.com
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1433 Volume 8, Issue 12, December 2023
International Journal of Innovative Science and
Research Technology ISSN No:-2456-2165 A.
The Voting Public Within the taxonomy of
publics, the Voting Public stands as a
paramount category, representing the
electorate in democratic societies. This
constituency comprises citizens who have
acquired the right to vote and are duly enlisted
in the electoral roll issued by the government.
It serves as a crucial operational definition in
the realm of research, effectively sieving out
uninformed masses from analyses concerning
issues that shape the government. In both pre
and post-polling surveys, the Voting Public is
utilized as the universe for research endeavors.
However, the qualification as a member of the
Voting Public does not guarantee an
individual's comprehensive awareness of the
issues under scrutiny in surveys or research. B.
The Attentive Public The Attentive Public
encompasses individuals possessing substantial
information and a likelihood of responding to
specific issues. Devine's observations indicate
that only 70% of voters occasionally and 50%
are predominantly attentive voters (Price 1992,
p. 38). This segment is well-informed and
actively engages in political matters through
debates and the dissemination of awareness.
As Lippmann (1925) contends, the Attentive
Public comprises those who consistently pay
attention to public affairs, engage thoughtfully
with public issues, and occasionally discuss
these matters with others (Price 1992, Pp. 38-
39). Devine, employing five survey measures in
an American context, identifies the Attentive
Public based on reported interest in politics,
interest in national election campaigns,
discussions about politics, exposure to
newspaper news about politics, and reading
about politics in magazines. In the Indian
context, additional spaces beyond traditional
media, such as tea shops, common meeting
places, lunch breaks, and informal social
gatherings, contribute to the identification of
the Attentive Public. C. The Active Public
Approximately 15% of the Attentive Public, as
identified by Neuman, constitutes the Active
Public. The distinction between political
activists and the Active Public is nuanced, with
Price noting that the engagement of this group
in political affairs spans formal means of
participation, such as monetary contributions,
organizational memberships, and attendance
at rallies, as well as active informal
participation in public discussions and debates
(Price 1992, p. 40). The Elite Public, exemplified
by political activists, affluent capitalists,
funders, religious and social organizations, and
certain educational communities, embodies the
epitome of the Active Public in the Indian
context. D. Issue Public: While the
aforementioned categories delineate levels of
awareness and participation in political affairs,
the Issue Public is characterized by its focus on
specific matters. It can encompass individuals
from all the above categories depending on the
nature of the issue at hand, resulting in four
varieties: Issue General Public, Issue Voting
Public, Issue Attentive Public, and Issue Active
Public. Notably, Price provides in-depth
elucidation on the last two types of Issue
Public. By way of illustration, a query regarding
the method of crop harvesting posed to the
general populace may yield a high percentage
of uninformed responses, yet the same
question posed to attentive farmers
significantly diminishes the likelihood of
uninformed or inattentive responses. In short,
these four categories collectively contribute to
the formation of public opinion, delineating a
journey from the amorphous concept of Mass
to the nuanced construct of the Public.
Subsequent sections will delve into a brief
review of the idea of Public, followed by an
exploration of the types and definitions of
Opinion. III. WHAT CONSTITUTES OPINION? The
interchangeability of the terms "opinion" and
"attitude" has been a notable phenomenon in
academic, particularly psychological, discourse,
as well as in practical discussions within
society. The systematic exploration of opinions
garnered increased attention from researchers
and policymakers during the early 1900s,
coinciding with advancements in scientific
techniques. Notably, the 1920s and 1930s
witnessed an accelerated adoption of survey
techniques to measure opinions and attitudes.
A significant milestone in this domain was
marked by Gallup, Crossley, and Roper's
pioneering study, aimed at enhancing the
accuracy of predicting the 1936 American
Presidential election. Subsequent to this
endeavor, the establishment of the Public
Opinion Quarterly in 1937 and the American
Association for Public Opinion Research
(AAPOR) a decade later underscored the
growing significance of opinion research. The
historical trajectory of the concepts of opinion
and attitude reveals a close interrelation. Doob
(1948) defines public opinion as "attitudes on
an issue when individuals are members of the
same social group" (Doob 1948, p.35), while
Childs (1965) characterizes opinion as "an
expression of attitude in words" (Childs 1965,
p. 13). Despite the interchangeability in some
literature, a nuanced distinction persists.
Opinion is often associated with observable
and verbal manifestations, involving conscious
expressions of support or opposition
contingent on situational and behavioral
contexts. Conversely, attitude is construed as
covert and psychological, translating affective
cognition into preferences or aversions, with
global relevance and independence from
contextual factors. In the realm of researching
or studying public opinion, the data on these
two terms frequently converge,
interdependently shaping the understanding of
public sentiment. Vincent Price introduces a
threefold categorization of opinion,
encompassing expression, thoughtfulness, and
the adaptation of attitudes towards specific
issues. Expressive opinion hinges on the notion
that a person may hold a judgment internally
without expressing it, emphasizing that an
unexpressed opinion lacks the essence of
opinion unless articulated. Despite a
definitional commitment to overt expressions,
analysts acknowledge the existence of
unexpressed, private, internal, and latent
opinions (Price 1992, p. 47). The second
category, opinion as thoughtful, distinguishes
itself from attitude by emphasizing the decision
content, transforming opinion into a realm of
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rationalization and thoughtfulness. While the
inculcation of attitude involves liking or
disliking, thoughtfulness over one's attitude
and its culmination results in the emergence of
an opinion. The third category, adaptation of
attitude, signifies the outcome of attitude
processes on a specific issue, conceptualizing
opinion as a product of attitude. In the realm of
psychology, opinions are further classified into
overt and covert opinions, both of which can
be effectively captured through survey
research. IV. OPINION FORMATION The
advancement of tools and methodologies in
opinion research has given rise to various
theoretical concepts aiming to expound on the
intricate nature of opinions and the underlying
processes. In his exploration of opinion
formation, Vincent Price meticulously examines
three crucial concepts: Schemata, values, and
group identification. These concepts share
deduced from cognitive processes rather than
Considered more basic and foundational than
opinions, which are perceived as situational
Employed as theoretical frameworks to
elucidate overt expressions of opinion (Price
1992, p. 52). Schemata, as defined by Fiske &
Taylor, represent a cognitive structure
embodying one's general knowledge about a
given concept or stimulus domain.
Encompassing basic conceptual information
and its interrelation with other concepts,
schemata play a pivotal role in connecting
diverse information to form an opinion. They
also guide the interpretation of information,
influencing the selection of data aligned with
existing schemata (Fiske & Taylor 1991).
Consequently, the content, format, design, and
illocutionary forces of news dissemination
shape schemata and therefore public opinion
(Fiske & Taylor 1991). The second category,
values, is inherently prescriptive and functions
in evaluating opinions at the final stage of
formation. Diverging from attitudes, which
constitute bundles of beliefs, values serve as
guiding beliefs steering opinions toward their
endpoint and shaping modes of conduct.
Values are inherently tied to goals (terminal
values) and processes (instrumental values)
designed to achieve those goals (Rokeach
1973). The third category influencing opinion
formation revolves around the individual's
relation to self-respect, identity, or group
identification. Social identity emerges as a
pivotal factor filtering the value system and
ultimately determining individual opinion. Price
contends that social identification plays a
central role in forming opinions on public
issues, particularly within the "conflict system"
of elite politics (Price 1992, p. 57).
Consequently, group identity stands as a
paramount factor in shaping public opinion and
decisions. Studies, such as those conducted by
Converse, underscore the significance of group
identity, with 50% of respondents affirming
allegiance to their group identity compared to
3% or 4% expressing adherence to abstract
ideologies like liberal or conservative. This
phenomenon is evident in Indian politics,
where caste identity often dictates voting
patterns—a topic that will be further explored
in subsequent chapters. In short, these
categories function as information centers
continuously connecting and formulating
opinions within individuals. The expression of
the entire process of opinion formation by
individuals or the public is often triggered by
immediate stimuli such as discussions,
processions, informal conversations, or social
settings like gatherings over drinks or tea. In
the Indian context, the expression of public
opinion is notably observed in tea and pan
shops, evening gatherings among friends,
canteens, and increasingly on social media
platforms such as Facebook and WhatsApp.
Before delving into the details of public opinion
formation, functioning, and impacts, a brief
exploration of the history of the term "public
opinion" will be undertaken in the following
section. V. UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC OPINION
The conceptualization of "Public Opinion" has
evolved over time, intricately connected to
historical events and literary developments.
The term itself, referring to the collective
viewpoint of the people, gained prominence in
English and French writings during the first half
of the 18th century. Scholars like Habermas
and Ozouf emphasize the significant role of
French intellectuals in shaping the essence of
the public sphere, common will, public spirit,
and general will, culminating in the concept of
public opinion as ‘publicness’ developed in
French societies (Habermas 1989 and Ozouf
1988). The emergence of the public sphere in
political discourse can be traced back to
influential forces such as the printing technique
in the 15th century, the growth of business and
merchant classes, and the acceleration of
Protestant reforms in the 16th century. These
developments led to the establishment of
spheres and ideas independent of Church
dominance and religious interventions. The
professionalization of arts, the rise of reading
clubs, the publication of moral literature, and
challenges posed by Martin Luther and Calvin
to ecclesiastical authority all contributed to the
development of capitalism and the emergence
of independent social institutions in Europe,
particularly in England, by the early 18th
century (Habermas 1989). Key institutions
fostering the evolution of the essence, if not
the explicit concept, of public opinion included
"the coffee houses of England (2000 in London
by the early 18th century), the salons of Paris,
and the table societies of Germany" (Speier
1950). During this period, as Price underscores,
Habermas noted the rational and egalitarian
features of public opinion. Public opinion,
during this epoch, was perceived as emanating
from reasoned discourse, active conversation,
and debate aimed at determining the common
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1436 will or general good—distinct from a
mere clash of individual interests (Price 1992,
p-10). The 18th century witnessed a significant
space allocated to debates and free
discussions, freeing them from the shackles of
domination. The ideas of freedom of
expression, secularism, and the sovereignty of
the public were integral to these debates. It
marked a period when the concepts of
individualism and public emerged concurrently,
often in conflict—a dynamic that persisted into
the 20th century. In other words, the 18th
century, public opinion was intricately linked to
discussion, the free flow of information, and
the reflection of the common good. It
functioned as a powerful tribunal to scrutinize
the actions of the state. Yet, aspects of our
contemporary understanding of public opinion
found their origins in later writings on
representative democracy by figures like
Madison, and English utilitarian theorists
Bentham and Mill (Price 1992, p. 12). Minar
characterizes public opinion for utilitarians as
the agglomerate interests of the community,
asserting that the utilitarian democratic model
is the most characteristic modern outlook on
public opinion (Price 1992, p. 13). While Mill,
Bentham, and Rousseau had differing
perspectives on the evolution of public opinion,
Rousseau, akin to Mill and Bentham, advocated
for the regular publication of government
activities to safeguard against the abuse of
power and legitimize government rule. From
these explorations, it is evident that although
the term "public opinion" was not commonly
used in practical governmental practices and
philosophical writings, its essence gained
legitimacy and significance in the 19th and
early 20th centuries. These developments in
theoretical discourse accelerated the need for
more empirical methods to explore public
opinion. However, in the early 20th century,
the focus shifted towards sociological and
psychological concerns rather than political and
philosophical ones. Analysts began to
concentrate on understanding the social and
behavioral aspects of public opinion (Price
1992, p. 15). Scholars like Binkley noted a shift
in inquiry towards the function and powers of
public opinion in society, the means of its
modification or control, and the relative
importance of emotional and intellectual
factors in its formulation (Binkley 1928, p. 393).
This shift in focus and the changing political
landscapes worldwide prompted the
emergence of academic sub-disciplines such as
collective behavior, social psychology, attitude
and opinion research, propaganda analysis,
political behavior, and mass communication
research (Price: 1992, p-15). Presently, studies
on public opinion have a much broader scope,
impacting political, social, market, religious,
economic, and spiritual domains, and vice
versa. VI. FORMATION AND EXPRESSION OF
PUBLIC OPINION The process of forming and
expressing opinions on particular issues varies
widely among the public. Consequently,
opinions related to various issues can manifest
in diverse forms and be assessed through
quantitative or qualitative methods.
Quantitative classification involves providing
respondents with predetermined options for a
specific question, as exemplified by the query,
"Do you know about the Indian Prime
Minister?" Quantitative opinion classification
No response. The reasons behind these diverse
responses can be explored through various
avenues (Erikson, Robert, Luttbeg, and Tedin
2015, pp. 20-22). While these options help
gauge the awareness level of respondents, they
do not capture the depth of public opinion on a
particular issue. Scholars like Schuman and
Presser argue that providing options can
constrain responses (Schuman and Presser
1981). Conversely, qualitative classification of
opinion involves open-ended questions that do
not provide predefined options. For instance,
asking, "Do you know about the Indian Prime
Minister, or what do you know about the
Indian Prime Minister?" elicits varied
responses, ranging from basic knowledge to
expert-level understanding (Erikson, Robert,
Luttbeg, and Tedin 2015, Pp. 19-22).
Understanding political information levels
among the adult public, as discussed by Erikson
et al., provides insights in the context of the
United States. The level of opinion holding,
whether low or high, also depends on the
specific issue being addressed. Price
emphasizes certain criteria for observing
"opinion holding," noting that changes in the
interviewer's words, timing, actions, and
gestures can influence public opinion and
affect study outcomes. This consideration sets
the stage for a clearer understanding of
subsequent chapters. A. Wording and
Sentences: The choice of words and sentence
structure in a questionnaire significantly
imp
"Do you support demonetization brought by
you support demonetization?" While these
questions may seem similar, Q. A. is a double-
barreled question, introducing both
'demonetization' and 'Modi' as stimuli. This
complexity may lead to varied responses based
on respondents' feelings towards each stimulus
as also suggested by Price (1992). Volume 8,
Issue 12, December 2023 International
Journal of Innovative Science and Research
Technology ISSN No:-2456-2165 B. Time and
Issue The timing of questions can influence
responses. Asking the same questions
immediately after a policy's inauguration may
yield different responses compared to asking
the same questions a year later. Certain
questions may attract higher responses, while
others may lead to more skipped answers. For
instance, questions about supporting terrorism
in Kashmir may receive high participation,
whereas questions about alternative forms of
government if India were not a democracy may
primarily attract responses from experts or
attentive individuals. C. Choice The options
given significantly shape public opinion. The
dichotomous choice of supporting or opposing
is common in public opinion research, and
including options like 'don't know' allows
respondents to abstain if they lack an opinion.
D. Depth of Knowledge Public knowledge varies
across issues, resulting in different types of
opinions. Price outlines categories such as
expert opinion, general or commonsensical
opinion, wrong opinion, no opinion, and un-
opinion, with the depth of knowledge varying
based on the issue (Price 1992, p. 65). E. Impact
Factor Opinions can range from intellectual
analysis to future actions. While intellectual
opinions may not translate into future
applicability, political activists' opinions often
lead to future action plans and involvement in
day-to-day politics. F. Contextual Settings The
formation of opinion also differs according to
the context and circumstances. For example, as
a researcher working on a project sponsored by
the European Union and the Ministry of
External Affairs, Government of India, in the
year 2014, I (accompanied by a female
researcher from Kashmir University) was
supposed to interview ex-militants in Jammu
and Kashmir. As a non-Kashmiri residing in
Delhi, the image of Kashmir I had in my mind
included a picture of Dal Lake in Srinagar,
snowfall, and icy mountains. During interviews
and visits to different remote areas of Kashmir,
I observed three responses to the 'no question
asked' about 'what is the condition of the
people in the area?' (Kumar 2014) The
Srinagar and adjacent districts Response: "Aap
log kya jano hamari sthiti kaisi hai aap to Delhi
se aaye ho na (Since you are from Delhi, how
would you know -
Case 2: Place: Kupwara region (which is closer
to the border and known for insurgency)
Response: "Aap log kya jano hamari sthiti kaisi
hai aap to Bharat se aaye ho na (Since you are
from India, how would you know - what is our
place whose half area is in Pakistan Occupied
Kashmir, POK, and where Army and police
rarely go) Response: "Aap log kya jano hamari
sthiti kaisi hai aap to Kashmir se aaye ho na
(Since you are from Kashmir, how would you
know - what is our condition?)" (Kumar 2014)
The above example from the field reveals a lot
about the circumstances, society, history,
culture, and politics, and how these factors
construct the opinion of the people. In this
context, Noelle-Neumann argues that a full
understanding of public opinion is not possible
unless and until the climate of opinion is also
examined (Price 1992, p. 67). Thus, the process
of forming and expressing public opinion is
complex and multifaceted, influenced by
various factors ranging from wording and
choices to the context and circumstances in
which opinions are sought. A nuanced
understanding of these dynamics is crucial for
meaningful research and analysis of public
opinion. VII. TYPES OF PUBLIC OPINION The
preceding discussion on the characteristics of
forming and holding opinions provides valuable
insights into the considerations essential for
collecting public opinion. This examination
serves as a foundation for crafting
questionnaires, conducting interviews, and
analyzing data. Building on these factors,
various types of public opinion can be
elucidated. A. High-Low Rate Opinion: The
depth of opinion holding, whether low or high,
is contingent upon the information available to
respondents. The level of information is
intricately linked to the issue at hand and the
individual's interest. For instance, the study
conducted by Erikson, Luttbeg, and Tedin
focused on the American President Nixon's
decision on Antibalistic Missiles. The findings
revealed that 41% of the public had an opinion
(23% aware and supported, 18% aware and
opposed), while 59% had no opinion (28%
aware but neutral, 31% unaware with no view).
The scholars concluded that the "extremely low
rate of opinion holding on ABM was largely
because of the extreme complexity of the
issue" (Erikson, Luttbeg, and Tedin 2015, p. 19-
20). Thus, both the issue's complexity and the
question's format significantly influence the
opinion rate in survey research. B. Nonopinion
Nonopinion refers to situations where
individuals either choose not to express an
opinion or genuinely lack a viewpoint on a
particular issue. Understanding the factors
contributing to nonopinion is crucial for
researchers, shedding light on the limits of
public awareness or interest in specific topics.
C. Doorstep Opinion Doorstep opinions are
spontaneous and immediate responses
provided by individuals in everyday settings.
These opinions are often shaped by the
situational context and can offer valuable
insights into the public's initial, unfiltered
reactions to various issues. Studying doorstep
opinions provides researchers with a unique
perspective on www.ijisrt.com
IJISRT23DEC1569
1437 Volume 8, Issue 12, December 2023
International Journal of Innovative Science and
Research Technology ISSN No:-2456-2165 the
immediate impact of events or policies on
public sentiment. In short, these types of public
opinion, ranging from high-low rate opinions to
non-opinions and doorstep opinions, showcase
the nuanced nature of public sentiment.
Researchers must consider these variations and
factors when designing surveys or conducting
studies to ensure a comprehensive
understanding of the diverse opinions held by
the public. VIII. CHALLENGES TO THE STUDY OF
PUBLIC OPINION The principal challenge in the
study of public opinion lies in reconciling two
Enlightenment values: rational individual
opinion and non-rational, emotional aspects of
public opinion. The more concrete emphasis on
the scientific investigation of public opinion
began in the early 20th century. However,
these investigations were also applied to the
philosophical examination of the public
conscience, thinking, and opinion. Over time,
the study of public opinion has solidified its
inevitability and growing significance,
accompanied by a multitude of advancements
in the analysis, tools, and techniques for
understanding public opinion. Nevertheless,
practitioners and analysts in the field of public
opinion have encountered multiple challenges.
Price has categorized these challenges into five
types within this domain. Firstly, dating back to
the era of Plato and Aristotle, public opinion,
both in its essence and actuality, has been
subject to critical scrutiny. These philosophers
harbored profound doubts regarding the
capacity and expertise inherent in public
opinion, particularly within the democratic
framework, citing a deficiency in expert
elements. Lippmann's seminal work, 'Public
Opinion' (1922), similarly manifests a lack of
confidence in the legislative and administrative
capabilities of public opinion. Bryce contends
that "public questions come in the third or
fourth rank among the interests of life" (Bryce
1888, p. 8). Lippmann further posits that
ordinary citizens lack adequate and accurate
knowledge about public affairs, characterizing
the political world as "out of reach, out of
mind, out of sight" (Lippmann 1922, p. 29). The
trust placed in public information agencies
contributing to the formation of public opinion
is vigorously contested by Bryce, Lippmann,
and scholars following similar lines,
underscoring the perceived lack of competency
in public opinion. The contemporary situation
in India and the process of shaping public
opinion, significantly reliant on media and
social media, warrant discussion to
comprehend the objectivity, accuracy,
expertise, and competency of public opinion. In
the current landscape where media agencies
are predominantly influenced by corporate
entities or subject to the control of ruling
individuals or political parties, questions arise
about the accuracy and impartiality of
information, thereby influencing public
opinion. The prevalence of fake news, paid
news, and the dissemination of highly
ideological and interest-driven information
raises doubts about the competency of public
opinion. Despite these inaccuracies, the study
of public opinion maintains its heightened
relevance in exploring the veracity of public
sentiment, irrespective of its ethical or moral
standing. Consequently, the original intent
behind the formation or examination of public
opinion, aiming to represent the genuine needs
of the people and provide legitimacy to the
government, has evolved beyond the ethical
and moral confines of public opinion,
transitioning into the realm of understanding
and shaping the existing public opinion among
the masses. Secondly, the examination of
'Public Opinion' by Lippmann indeed
underscores the public's inadequacy in forming
accurate opinions. However, scholars such as
John Dewey, Lasswell, and Schattschneider
contribute an additional dimension to the
study, addressing the challenges within public
opinion. Dewey posits that the primary issue
lies not predominantly in the public's
incompetence but rather in the insufficient
methodology of public opinion communication
and formation. Advocating for the rational and
judgmental faculty of the public, Dewey
emphasizes the role of education in enhancing
public awareness, urging the improvement of
resources in investigating public opinion. He
asserts, "the essential need, in other words, is
the improvement of the methods and
conditions of debate, discussion, and
persuasion. That is the problem of the public"
(Dewey 1927, p. 208). Similarly, Lasswell, in
"Democracy through Public Opinion," explores
alternative approaches for improved results in
public opinion and the sustenance of
democratic institutions. On a different note,
Schattschneider identifies substantial potential
in the reasoning abilities of the public,
contending that modern individuals possess
the capacity to navigate governmental affairs.
He argues that people, with increased
involvement in day-to-day government affairs,
can make informed choices and reflections
(Schattschneider 1957). Therefore, the
necessity for a competitive political system
arises, wherein the public can form opinions
more effectively with clear alternative options.
Examining the scenario of Indian public
opinion, these issues gain significant relevance.
As the largest democracy globally, with a
substantial constitution, Indian democracy has
endured for over 70 years. The survival of
Indian democracy can be attributed to the
proper reformation of public awareness and
opinion, notwithstanding various ideological
rumors. This endurance stems from the
simultaneous existence of critical public
judgment and ideological ignorance or
adherence. While individuals vote based on
caste and religious considerations, they also
evaluate the performance of the incumbent
party, resulting in strong anti-incumbency
practices in Indian electoral behavior.
Furthermore, mass ignorance toward certain
significant issues is counteracted by mass
intelligence and preferences on matters of
importance. The juxtaposition of Plato's ideas
and Schattschneider's relevance in Indian
politics emphasizes the intricate dynamics
shaping public opinion in the Indian context.
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IJISRT23DEC1569
1438 Volume 8, Issue 12, December 2023
International Journal of Innovative Science and
Research Technology ISSN No:-2456-2165
Thirdly, this perspective is rooted in the notion
that there can never be an absolute public
opinion; rather, it will always represent the
viewpoint of a specific group, namely the
majority. Within this context, two dangers
associated with public opinion emerge: the
dominance of the majority and the potential
for the minority to become the dominator.
Plato contends that public opinion is perilous as
it lacks the voice of the expert. Furthermore, if
the public opinion of the majority prevails, it
does so at the expense of minority viewpoints.
This nuanced discussion has been expounded
upon by Tocqueville in the context of
democracy in America (Tocqueville 1956
[1835]). Consequently, the peril of
majoritarianism manifests in two ways—firstly,
the absence of expert opinion, and secondly,
the marginalization of minority perspectives.
Another peril within public opinion is
articulated by scholars addressing the concept
of power elites. Proponents such as Robert
Dahl and Michael assert that democracy or
power invariably resides in the hands of a
select group of influential individuals, i.e., the
political elite. The transfer of power cyclically
revolves among these elites, and even the
formation of public opinion merely reflects the
reiteration of the viewpoints of these powerful
political elites. An additional illustrative
example elucidating the tyranny of the majority
in the Indian context is discernible in the realm
of language policies. The sway held by linguistic
majorities, often coupled with strategic
political machinations, recurrently results in
the marginalization of linguistic minorities,
underscoring the hazards associated with
majoritarianism within the complex fabric of a
diverse and pluralistic society. Take, for
instance, the state of Maharashtra, where
Marathi predominates as the majority
language. The Marathi-speaking populace,
backed by robust political backing, has, on
occasions, pursued policies emphasizing the
preeminence of Marathi across various
spheres, ranging from educational initiatives to
administrative functions. This linguistic
majoritarian inclination has, at times, led to the
neglect or sidelining of linguistic minorities,
such as the Gujarati-speaking community in
specific pockets of the state. In this scenario,
political entities aligned with the linguistic
majority frequently orchestrate language
policies geared toward the advancement and
imposition of the majority language. The
discourse encompassing language
metamorphoses into a strategic instrument
through which the linguistic majority reinforces
its ascendancy, consigning linguistic minorities
to the fringes. This dynamic can culminate in a
scenario where the linguistic rights and cultural
expressions of minority groups find themselves
eclipsed or stifled to accommodate the
linguistic predilections of the majority. Similar
instances can be observed in other states, like
Tamil Nadu or West Bengal. Herein, it’s very
challenging to come an objective Judgment on
public opinion. Fourthly, the susceptibility of
the public to emotional persuasion is a
noteworthy aspect. Kornhauser observes that
appeals to emotions constitute an integral
component of political dynamics (Price 1992, p.
20). Lippmann underscores this by stating, “the
formation of a singular general will out of a
multitude of disparate wishes is not a Hegelian
mystery, as imagined by many political
philosophers, but an art well-known to leaders,
politicians, and steering committees. It consists
essentially in the use of symbols, which evoke
emotions after they have been detached from
their ideas” (Lippmann 1925, p. 47). The
ascendancy and triumph of fascist parties in
Europe serve as a pertinent exemplification of
the aforementioned argument. In the Indian
context, the success of the BJP in the general
election of 2014, propelled by persuasive
forces such as ‘religion and development,’ also
translates into victories for the BJP in various
state assembly elections until 2018. However,
predicting the efficacy of similar persuasive
strategies by the party in subsequent elections
remains uncertain. Nevertheless, the prevailing
reality in Indian society and politics
underscores the enduring influence of religion
and caste as potent persuasive forces that
shape or reshape public opinion among the
masses. Finally, the domination of the elite
stands out as a pivotal factor in generating and
regenerating public opinion. Ginsberg astutely
observes that public opinion in modern
democracies functions as the 'domestication of
mass belief' (Ginsberg 1986). Scholars such as
Mills, Habermas, and Chomsky, in addition to
Dahl and Michael, have extensively expounded
on the role of elites in influencing public
opinion. Mills posits that in the American
context, the population has been transformed
into a market that consumes public opinion
rather than being a public that produces ideas
and opinions (Habermas 1962). This
transformation of the public into a market for
consuming public opinion has become a
routine phenomenon in India as well. The
media has evolved into an agent for the
dissemination of rumors and the production of
information, with the public consuming these
elements to form their opinions. IX.
CONCLUSION In conclusion, this research paper
presents a comprehensive understanding the
concept of public opinion within the ambit of
social science research. The historical journey,
tracing its roots from influential philosophers
like Rousseau and Locke to its evolution in the
18th century and subsequent complexities in
terms of conceptualization, meaning and
development has been explore in detail in the
first part of the paper. To elaborate the terms
‘public and ‘opinion’ are explained by defining
their variants and types historically. The types
of public consists of General Public, Voting
Public, Attentive Public, Active Public, and Issue
Public; whereas ‘opinion is meticulously
differentiated from the term attitude and other
related terms which are mostly used in the
disciplines of psychology and philosophy.
www.ijisrt.com
IJISRT23DEC1569
1439 Volume 8, Issue 12, December 2023
International Journal of Innovative Science and
Research Technology ISSN No:-2456-2165 The
second part of the paper demonstrates the
process of opinion formation and shows how it
involves the concepts such as schemata, values,
and group identification. These foundational
elements serve as theoretical explanations for
the overt expressions of public sentiment,
highlighting the dynamic nature of opinion
formation in response to changing
circumstances. The third part significantly
focuses on the historical exploration of the
term "public opinion" from its early usage in
the 18th century to its contemporary relevance
establishes connections with significant events,
literary developments, and philosophical ideas.
In the 20th century, the research domain was
expanded to cover the scope of inquiry into
sociological and psychological aspects of public
opinion, leading to the establishment of
academic sub-disciplines. The role of
organizations like the American Association for
Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) in shaping
the discipline and the challenges in procuring
objectivity in public opinion survey research in
the contemporary democratic settings remains
the major concern of this paper. REFERENCES
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1. Who among the following strongly said
that “Man is a Political Animal”?
2. A. Socrates
3. B. Plato
4. C. Aristotle
5. D. None of the Above.
6. Answer C
7. 2. Traditional approach gives stress on:
8. A. Values.
9. B. Facts.
10. C. Objectivity.
11. D. Precision.
12. Answer A
13. 3. ‘Credo of Relevance’ Signaled
14. A. Modernism.
15. B. Behaviouralism.
16. C. Post-Behaviouralism.
17. D. Rationalism.
18. Answer B
19. 4. ‘The Intellectual God Father’ of
Behaviouralism is
20. A. Charles. E. Merriam
21. B. David Easton.
22. C. Laswell.
23. D. None of the above.
24. Answer A
25. 5. Hobbes's Theory of Social Contract is
explained in his book.
26. A. Republic.
27. B. Prince.
28. C. Social Contract.
29. D. Leviathan.
30. Answer D
31. 6. ‘Two Treatises of Government’ Was
Written By
32. A. John Locke.
33. B. J.J Rousseau.
34. C. Thomas Hobbes.
35. D. Spencer.
36. Answer A
37. 7. Which one of the following is not
relevant to the Traditional Approach.
38. A. Philosophical
39. B. Historical.
40. C. Institutional
41. D. Behavioral.
42. Answer D
43. 8. Integration of Political Science with
other Social Sciences Is a basic
principle of
44. A. Traditionalism.
45. B. Behaviouralism.
46. C. Liberalism.
47. D. Post – Behaviouralism.
48. Answer B
49. 9. The success of democracy depends
upon
50. A. Periodic Elections.
51. B. Voting.
52. C. Campaigning in The Elections.
53. D. All the above
54. Answer D
55. 10. Which of the following is a
permanent feature of a representative
form of government?
56. A. Voting.
57. B. Decision Making.
58. C. Military Force.
59. D. None of The Above.
60. Answer A
61. 11. “A right is a claim recognized by
society and enforced by the state” who
said this?
62. A. Laski
63. B. Bosanquet
64. C. Rousseau
65. D. Green
66. Answer B
67. 12 Who described democracy as “a
form of government in which everyone
has a share”?
68. A. John Seeley
69. B. J.S Mill
70. C. Bryce
71. D. None of The Above
72. Answer A
73. 13. Who said “Rights are those
conditions of social life without which
no man can be his best self”
74. A. Hobhouse
75. B. Bosanquet
76. C. Laski
77. D. Hegel
78. Answer C
79. 14. Who wrote the book ‘A Grammar
of politics’
80. A. Laski
81. B. Hegal
82. C. J.S Mill
83. D T.H Green
84. Answer A
85. 15. The concept of Greek, ‘Justice’ was
86. A. Legal
87. B. Moral
88. C. Social
89. D. Political
90. Answer B
91. 16. The origin of democracy can be
traced back to
92. A. Ancient Greek City States
93. B. Medieval Period
94. C. Modern Era
95. D. Feudalism
96. Answer A
97. 17. Who among the following said,
“Liberty is the opposite of over
government”?
98. A. Seeley
99. B. Prof. Ramsay Muir
100. C. Laski
101. D. J.S Mill
102. Answer A
103. 18. What is meant by Social
Justice.
104. A. All should have the same
Political Rights.
105. B. All should have the same
Economic rights.
106. C. All kinds of discrimination and
privileges based on caste, color, creed,
and sex should be
107. eliminated.
108. D. All should have the right to
freedom of religion.
109. Answer C
110. 19. A democratic society is one
in which
111. A. Government is popularly
elected.
112. B. Liberty is given the highest
value.
113. C. The spirit of equality and
fraternity prevails.
114. D. All the above.
115. Answer D
116. 20. Who wrote the book
‘Politics’
117. A. Socrates
118. B. Plato
119. C. Aristotle
120. D. Rousseau
121. Answer C
122. 21. Behavioral approach in
political science is “an attempt to make
the empirical content of political
science more scientific” who said this?
123. A. Charles. E. Merriam
124. B. David Easton
125. C. Powell
126. D. Robert A Dahl
127. Answer A
128. 22. Eight principles of
the Behavioral Approach of political
science is generally known as:
129. A. Regularities
130. B. Pure Science
131. C. Verifications
132. D. Intellectual Foundations
133. Answer D
134. 23. Who wrote the book ‘On
liberty’?
135. A. Henry Maine
136. B. J.S Mill
137. C. T.H Green
138. D. Laski
139. Answer B
140. 24. ‘A theory of justice ‘is the
work of
141. A. J.S Mill
142. B. Bodin
143. C. John Rawls
144. D. Montesquieu
145. Answer C
146. 25. The term ‘Globalization’ was
coined by
147. A. Kaplan
148. B. Theodore Levitt
149. C. Burton
150. D. Spiro
151. Answer B
152. 26. Democracy is the rule of
153. A. Voters
154. B. People
155. C. Members of parliament
156. D. Political Parties.
157. Answer B
158. 27. Who defined democracy as
“Government of the people, by the
people, for the people”?
159. A. Woodrow Wilson
160. B. Lord Bryce
161. C. Abraham Lincoln
162. D. Laski
163. Answer C
164. 28. Lord Bryce has written,
“That form of government in which the
ruling power of a state is legally
vested, not in any particular class, but
in the members of the community as a
whole”. Which form of government he
is referring to?
165. A. Democracy
166. B. Parliamentary Government
167. C. Federal Government
168. D. Unitary Government
169. Answer A
170. 29. The two words ‘demos’ and
‘Kratos’ from which democracy draws
its origin belong to
171. A. Latin Language.
172. B. Greek Language.
173. C. French Language.
174. D. Spanish Language.
. Answer B
176. 30. The two forms of democracy
are
177. A. Parliamentary and
presidential.
178. B. Direct and indirect.
179. C. Monarchical and Republican.
180. D. None of the above.
181. Answer B
182. 31. Which one of the following
theories of democracy accords high
priority to the political rights of
citizens?
183. A. Pluralist theory of democracy.
184. B. Elitist of democracy.
185. C. Marxist theory of democracy.
186. D. Liberal theory of democracy.
187. Answer D
188. 32. Which theory of democracy
attaches great importance to the
economic rights of man?
189. A. Marxist theory
190. B. Elite Theory
191. C. Pluralist Theory
192. D. All the above
193. Answer A
194. 33. The term ‘liberty’ has been
drawn from the Latin term
195. A. Libel
196. B. Lingua
197. C. Labor
198. D. Liber
199. Answer D
200. 34. One of the major factors
that have stimulated the globalization
process is
201. A. Effective utilization of
resources.
202. B. Increase in income and
wealth.
203. C. Willingness to cooperate.
204. D. Rapid Improvement in
technology.
205. Answer D
206. 35. Removing barriers or
restrictions said by the government is
called
207. A. Liberalization
208. B. Investment
209. C. Favorable trade
210. D. Free trade
211. Answer A
212. 36. Globalization by connecting
countries leads to
213. A. Lesser competition among
producers.
214. B. Greater competition among
producers.
215. C. No competition between
producers.
216. D. None of these.
217. Answer B
218. 37. ‘Euro centrism’ as the term
for an ideology was coined by whom?
219. A. Karl Marx
220. B. Green
221. C. Samir Amin
222. D. Rousseau
223. Answer C
224. 38. During the enlightenment of
the 18th century:
225. A. Scholars emphasized the
supernatural.
226. B. Scholars denied the possibility
of a scientific study of humans.
227. C. Several scholars believed
human social life could be studied
scientifically.
228. D. None of these.
229. Answer C
230. 39. Economics deals with
231. A. Production of goods and
services.
232. B. Consumption of goods and
services.
233. C. Distribution of goods and
services.
234. D. All the above.
235. Answer D
236. 40. The social science that deals
with human use of the natural
environment is:
237. A. Genetics
238. B. Geography
239. C. Political science
240. D. Sociology
241. Answer B
242. 41. Political science stresses the
study of:
243. A. Government
244. B. State
245. C. Power
246. D. All the above
247. Answer D
248. 42. Psychology deals with
249. A. Only violent behavior.
250. B. Only normal behavior.
251. C. Mental states of individual
humans.
252. D. Groups of people in
interaction
253. Answer C
254. 43. The study of human group
behavior is the definition of
255. A. Psychology
256. B. Sociology
257. C. Geology
258. D. None of the above
259. Answer B
260. 44. The social sciences lack
261. A. Theories
262. B. Concepts
263. C. Scientific laws
264. D. Generalizations
265. Answer C
266. 45. Ethical neutrality is the
opposite of
267. A. Objectivity
268. B. Generalization
269. C. Judgmental Social science
270. D. Participant observation
271. Answer C
272. 46. Anthropology is restricted
to the study of:
273. A. Primitive people only.
274. B. Pre-historic people only.
275. C. Modern people only.
276. D. None of these.
277. Answer D
278. 47. Objectivity means
279. A. Precision
280. B. Taking nothing for granted
281. C. Eliminating bias
282. D. Repeating observations
283. Answer C
284. 48. The study and analysis of
preliterate societies is one of the chief
concerns of
. A. Sociology
. B. Psychology
. C. Anthropology
288. D. History
289. Answer C
290. 49. The social sciences were
initially concerned with the
consequences of
291. A. American Revolution
292. B. The French Revolution
293. C. The Russian Revolution
294. D. The Industrial Revolution
295. Answer D
296. 50. The study of traits that
appear in specific populations as an
adaptation to a specific environment is
called
297. A. Physical Anthropology
298. B. Cultural Anthropology
299. C. Demography
300. D. Psychology
301. Answer A
302. 51. Furnishing historical data
about the past with no written records
Is the task of
303. A. Archeology
304. B. Cultural geography
305. C. History
306. D. Anthropology
307. Answer A
308. 52. The most experimental of
social sciences is
309. A. Sociology
310. B. Psychology
311. C. Archeology
312. D. Economics
313. Answer B
314. 53. The discipline that studies
such disparate subjects as the
environment religion, politics,
criminality,
315. organization and so on is
316. A. History
317. B. Sociology
318. C. Political science
319. D. Psychology
320. Answer B
321. 54. Which of the following does
not fall within the preview of the
political liberty
322. A. Right to vote.
323. B. Right to contest elections.
324. C. Right to criticize the
government.
325. D. Right to move the court for
the enforcement of rights.
326. Answer D
327. 55. Political liberty ensures
328. A. Protection against oppressive
rule
329. B. Economic equality
330. C. Basic Amenities of life
331. D. None of the above
332. Answer A
333. 56. Who said “Political liberty
without economic equality is a myth”
334. A. T.H. green
335. B. J.S Mill
336. C. G.D.H Cole
337. D. H.J. Laski
338. Answer C
339. 57. Liberty and equality are
340. A. Complementary to each other
341. B. Contradictory to each other
342. C. Unrelated to each other
343. D. None of the above
344. Answer A
345. 58. Which of the following best
describes eurocentrism?
346. A. Eurocentrism is a style of
analysis in which European societies are
compared to non –
347. European societies to produce
an unbiased comparison of the relative
merits of each.
348. B. Eurocentrism is a thought
style in which the assessment and
evaluation of non-European
349. societies are couched in terms of
the cultural assumptions and biases of
Europeans.
350. C. Eurocentrism describes
studies or scholarly work that only
consider European political or
351. economic systems.
352. D. All the above.
353. Answer B
354. 59. The credit for developing a
behavioral approach to the study of
political science goes to
355. A. The American political
scientists.
356. B. The British political scientists.
357. C. The German political
scientists.
358. D. The Political scientist of the
third world.
359. Answer A
360. 60. Though the Behaviorist
Approach to the study of political
science was developed after the first
361. world war it gained popularity
only
362. A. In the thirties of the twentieth
century.
363. B. After the second world war.
364. C. In the sixties of the twentieth
century.
365. D. In the eighties of the
twentieth century.
366. Answer B
367. 61. The behaviorist approach to
the study of political science was
developed as a protest against
368. A. The historical approach.
369. B. The philosophical approach.
370. C. Descriptive-institutional
approach.
371. D. All the above.
372. Answer D
373. 62. The behaviorist approach
differs from the traditional approach
for the study of political science in so
far as
374. A. It is analytical
375. B. It is general rather than
particular
376. C. It is explanatory rather than
ethical
377. D. It has all the above features
378. Answer D
379. 63. Which one of the following
is regarded as the most important
contribution of behaviouralism to
political science
380. A. It greatly helped in theory
building
381. B. It developed several new
concepts
382. C. It developed several new
tools of research
383. D. It emphasized the important
role which history can’t play in research
384. Answer C
385. 64. Civil liberty is inherent in
the laws of
386. A. State
387. B. Nature
388. C. Society
389. D. All the above
390. Answer A
391. 65. Who said: “Where there is
no law there is no freedom”?
392. A. T.H. Green
393. B. Locke
394. C. Hobbes
395. D. Mac Iver
396. Answer B
397. 66. Which one of the following
statements is correct
398. A. Liberty means the absence of
all restraints
399. B. Liberty means the power to
do whatever one pleases
400. C. Liberty means the absence of
objection
401. D. Liberty is not the total
absence of restraint but the existence
of socially acceptable restrains
402. Answer D
403. 67. The concept of natural
liberty is associated with
404. A. Divine origin theory
405. B. Social contract theory
406. C. Force Theory
407. D. Evolutionary theory
408. Answer B
409. 68. Who among the following
was the chief exponent of natural
liberty
410. A. Rousseau
411. B. Laski
412. C. Plato
413. D. Herbert Spencer
414. Answer A
415. 69. Political liberty is often
taken as synonymous with
416. A. Democracy
417. B. Majority rule
418. C. Freedom
419. D. Independence of division
420. Answer A
421. 70. Which one of the following
statements is not correct?
422. A. Civil liberty is basic to other
kinds of liberties
423. B. Civil liberty is granted only to
the citizens
424. C. Civil liberty is available to
both citizens and non-citizens
425. D. Civil liberty exists only in civil
society
426. Answer B
427. 71. Which one of the following
statements is not correct
428. A. Economic liberty means
freedom from fear and starvation
429. B. Self-government in the
industry is an important feature of
economic liberty
430. C. Economic liberty means
common ownership of the means of
production and distribution
431. D. Economic liberty aims at
establishing a self-sufficient society
432. Answer C
433. 72. The term ‘Social Sciences’
first appeared in the work of
434. A. William Thomson
435. B. J. Schumpeter
436. C. Aristotle
437. D. Harry Johnson
438. Answer A
439. 73.’ Republic’ is the work of
440. A. Socrates
441. B. Plato
442. C. Aristotle
443. D. None of these
444. Answer B
445. 74. The book ’Principles of
Political Science’ was written by
446. A. Socrates
447. B. Gilchrist
448. C. Machiavelli
449. D. Jean Bodin
450. Answer B
451. 75. In Renaissance human
reason placed above
452. A. Culture
453. B. Faith
454. C. Arts
455. D. Literature
456. Answer B
457. 76. The conflict between
religious learning and believes and
rationality learning and beliefs is the
basic
458. characteristics of
459. A. Modern Era
460. B. Educated Society
461. C. Renaissance
462. D. None of These
463. Answer C
464. 77. The period from 1453 to the
end of the 17th century was
characterized by the rebirth and
proliferation of
465. A. Modern knowledge
466. B. Ancient knowledge
467. C. Modern thinking
468. D. Ancient thinking
469. Answer B
470. 78. Enlightenment was to a
large extent based on
471. A. Profit Motive
472. B. Humanitarian Principles
473. C. Practical wisdom
474. D. All the Above
475. Answer B
476. 79. Enlightenment thinkers
opened new and very significant areas
of
477. A. Observation
478. B. Field Study
479. C. Inquiry
480. D. Thinking
481. Answer C
482. 80. In the period of
enlightenment as the organizing
principle of knowledge, rationality
replaced
483. A. Culture
484. B. Civilization
485. C. Religion
486. D. Speculation
487. Answer C
488. 81. The period of
enlightenment was in
489. A. 1650 CE and 1700 CE
490. B. 1500 CE and 1550 CE
491. C. 1400 CE and 1450CE
492. D. None of these
493. Answer A
494. 82. Which of the following is
not correctly matched
495. A. Herodotus – Political Science
496. B. Auguste Comte – Sociology
497. C. Adam Smith – Economics
498. D. Sigmund Fraud - Psychology
499. Answer A
500. 83. Who is regarded as the
‘Father of History
501. A. Plato
502. B. Aristotle
503. C. August Comte
504. D. Herodotus
505. Answer D
506. 84. The age of _____ saw a
revolution within natural philosophy
507. A. Reformation
508. B. Renaissance
509. C. Enlightenment
510. D. Modern Age
511. Answer C
512. 85. The history of the social
sciences begins in the routes of the
ancient _______
513. A. Philosophy
514. B. Epics
515. C. Epigraphy
516. D. Literature
517. Answer A
518. 86. ________ is regarded as the
father of Political Science.
519. A. Herodotus
520. B. Aristotle
521. C. Plato
522. D. Rousseau
523. Answer B
524. 87. The term sociology was
derived from the Greek term logos and
_____ word socius meaning
‘companion’
525. or ‘society’
526. A. French
527. B. Latin
528. C. German
529. D. Austria
530. Answer B
531. 88. _____ is central to the
procedures of the scientific method
532. A. Oral History
533. B. Comparison
534. C. Objectivity
535. D. Customs
536. Answer C
537. 89. _____ affect the objectivity
of the study
538. A. Personal Bias
539. B. Morality
540. C. Customs
541. D. Ethics
542. Answer A
543. 90. The word Psychology comes
from the ancient Greek psyche which
means _____
544. A. Society
545. B. Man
546. C. Mind
547. D. Brain
548. Answer C
549. 91. Positivism is advocated by
_____
550. A. Karl Marx
551. B. Herbert Spencer
552. C. Auguste Comte
553. D. Durkheim
554. Answer C
555. 92. The term Ethical Neutrality
is related to the
556. A Knowledge
557. B Social Research
558. C Philosophy
559. D Commerce
560. Answer B
561. 93. The Book ‘Das Capital’ was
written by
562. A-Max Weber
563. B Karl Marx
564. C Herbert Spencer
565. D Laski
566. Answer B
567. 94. A set of moral principles and
values are called
568. A Methods
569. B Rules
570. Tools
571. D Ethics
572. Answer D
573. 95. ‘General view of positivism’
was written by?
574. A Hebert Spencer
575. B Max Weber
576. C Auguste Comte
577. D Talcott Parsons
578. Answer C
579. 96. The word ________ is from
the Greek for ‘human being’ or
‘person’
580. A. Socius
581. B Anthropos
582. C Logos
583. D Oikos
584. Answer B
585. 97. ______ is commonly used as
an umbrella term to refer to a plurality
of fields
586. A. Natural Sciences
587. B. Human Sciences
588. C. Social Sciences
589. D. Psychical Sciences
590. Answer C
591. 98. Enlighten thought laid the
groundwork for the development of
592. A. Religious notions
593. B. Speculations
594. C. Social Scientific Thought
595. D. All the above
596. Answer C
597. 99. Which one of the following
has been wrongly listed as the basis of
behaviouralism moment by David
598. Easton
599. A. Quantifications
600. B. Values
601. C. Systematization
602. D. Pure science
603. Answer B
604. 100. The branch of philosophy
that studies assumptions about the
nature of reality and existence are
605. A. Epistemology
606. B. Ontology
607. C. Methodology
608. D. Phenomenology
609. Answer B
610. Read: MCQ on Indian
Constitution
The Elephant is a symbol of which Indian
political party?
1. National Congress Party
2. Communist Party of India
3. Bahujan Samaj Party
4. Rashtriya Janata Dal
Who among the following is one of the
founder members of Bhartiya Jana Sangh?
1. KM Munshi
2. Baldev Singh
3. Minoo Masani
4. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee
When was the first general election held
in India?
1. 1953-54
2. 1951-52
3. 1949-50
4. 1948-49
In the context of Elections in India, the
term VVPAT stands for:
1. Voter Visit Poll Account Trail
2. Voter Vivid Press Audit Trail
3. Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail
4. Voter Verifiable Paper Account Trail
Which of the following statements is
correct in the context of Indian
Democracy?
1. allows people to choose their
representatives
2. allows people to take over the country
in cases of financial emergency.
3. commands people to pay taxes for
pilgrimage.
4. allows the military to rule the country.
As of 10 April 2022, how many general
elections have been held to the Lok
Sabha?
1. 19
2. 15
3. 21
4. 17
EVM or Electronic Voting Machine was
used for the first time in which state?
1. Bihar
2. Kerala
3. Gujarat
4. Uttar Pradesh
By whom are political parties in India
recognised ?
1. Election Commission of India
2. The Finance Commission
3. State Election Commission
4. None of the above
Which party government announced the
formation of a second backward classes
commission in 1978?
1. Indian National Congress Party
2. Bharatiya Janata Party
3. Janata Party
4. United Democratic Party
Which among the following States has the
largest number of Lok Sabha seats?
1. West Bengal
2. Gujarat
3. Assam
4. Rajasthan
3. According to the new rules, RUPPs enjoy all
the benefits available to recognized political
parties, including reserved symbols and free
broadcast facilities.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
1. 1 and 2 only
2. 2 and 3 only
3. 1 and 3 only
4. 1, 2 and 3
Which of the following parts of the Indian
Constitution consists of articles relating to
elections?
1. Part V
2. Part VII
3. Part X
4. Part XV
5. None of the above
The statement is not correct-
1. Bikaner State had its own Gram
Panchayat Act even before 1928.
2. The first elections under the Rajasthan
Panchayat Samiti and Zilla Parishad Act,
1959 were held in September-October,
1959.
3. The Panchayati Raj system was first
inaugurated in the country by the then
Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru on
October 2, 1959 in Nagaur, Rajasthan.
4. In 1952, the Rajasthan Panchayati Raj
Act came into force and gram
panchayats were established
throughout the state.
5. The Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act of
1952 was enforced only in urban areas.
Which of the following statements about the
reasons for conducting elections is false?
1. Elections enable people to judge the
performance of the government.
2. People select the representative of their
choice in an election.
3. Elections enable people to evaluate the
performance of the judiciary.
4. People can indicate which policies they
prefer.
5. None of the above
How many seats were won by Telugu
Desam Party (TDP) in Lok Sabha elections
2024 in the state of Andhra Pradesh?
1. 21
2. 12
3. 16
4. 10
If a research project is set up so that
everybody in the population of interest
has an equal chance of being included in
the sample, the research involves :
1. quota sampling
2. judgemental sampling
3. probability sampling
4. convenience sampling
Which of the following refers to a method
of sampling in which a core group of
participants who are initially sampled for
a research study recruit or recommend
other potential participants ?
1. Simple random sampling
2. Snowball sampling
3. Quota sampling
4. Stratified random sampling
Identify the sampling issues that are
problematic in online surveys:
(A) Many people use more than one internet
service provider.
(B) Every person has only one (unique) email
address.
(C) A house hold may have one computer but
several users.
(D) Internet users are a biased sample of the
population.
Choose the correct answer from the options
given below:
1. (A), (B) and (C) Only
2. (B), (C) and (D) Only
3. (A), (B) and (D) Only
4. (C) and (D) Only
If there is linear trend present in the
population, then which of the following
methods is the most efficient sampling
technique?
1. Cluster Sampling
2. Systematic Sampling
3. Stratified Sampling
4. Simple Random Sampling
In sampling, the lottery method is used
for
1. Interpretation
2. Theorisation
3. Conceptualisation
4. Randomisatio
From the list given below, identify those which
are called ‘Non-Probability Sampling’
procedures:
(i) Simple random sampling
(ii) Dimensional sampling
(iii) Snowball sampling
(iv) Cluster sampling
(v) Quota sampling
(vi) Stratified sampling
Choose the correct option:
1. (i), (ii) and (iii)
2. (ii), (iv) and (v)
3. (i), (iii) and (iv)
4. (ii), (iii) and (v)
A college principal conduct an
ethnographic probe into the problems
faced by tribal students. Which method of
sampling will be most appropriate?
1. Random sampling
2. Stratified sampling
3. Cluster sampling
4. Systematic sampling
A sampling technique in which initially
sampled respondents contact and recruit
others in their social network for
participation in the research is called
1. Convenience sampling
2. Snowball sampling
3. Quota sampling
4. Systematic sampling
When a sample is chosen because it is
available to the researcher, it is known as
1. Probability sampling
2. Convenience sampling
3. Systematic sampling
4. Objective sampling
Which of the following sampling
procedures will be appropriate for
conducting researches with empirico-
inductive research paradigm?
1. Simple random sampling procedure
2. Systematic sampling procedure
3. Stratified sampling procedure
4. Any of the non-probability sampling
procedures
Which of the following are NOT probability
sampling techniques?
A. Simple Random
B. Stratified
C. Snowball
D. Cluster
E. Convenience
Choose the correct answer from the options
given below:
1. A and E only
2. C and E only
3. B and D only
4. B and C only
Snowball sampling technique falls under
the category of:
1. Probability sampling
2. Non-probability sampling
3. Random sampling
4. Quota sampling
Which of the following samples are non-
random or non-probability samples?
(A) Systematic sample
(B) Quota sample
(C) Cluster or area sample
(D) Purposive sample
(E) Replicated sample
Choose the correct answer from the options
given below:
1. (A), (C) Only
2. (B).(C), (D) Only
3. (A), (D), (E) Only
4. (B), (D) Only
Snowball sampling is the process of
selecting a sample using
611. Networks
612. Groups
613. Snowballs
614. Computer Programs
The 9th Schedule to the Constitution of
India was added by the:
1. Third Amendment Act
2. Fourth Amendment Act
3. First Amendment Act
4. Sixth Amendment Act
5. None of the above
How many languages have been listed in
8th schedule of Indian constitution?
1. 18
2. 22
3. 15
4. 14
5. None of the above
Which schedule of the Indian Constitution
contains provisions regarding "anti-
defection"?
1. 10th Schedule
2. 4th Schedule
3. 9th Schedule
4. 7th Schedule
Uttar Pradesh Zamindari Abolition and
Land Reforms Act was passed in which of
the following years?
1. 1948
2. 19950
3. 1960
4. 1975
With reference to Seventh Schedule of
the Indian Constitution, The subject
'infectious or contagious diseases' is a
part of:
1. State List
2. Union List
3. Residuary Powers
4. Concurrent List
Which Schedule contains
provisions relating to the emoluments,
allowances, and privileges as to the
President and Governors of States?
1. Second Schedule
2. Third Schedule
3. Fourth Schedule
4. First Schedule
The 9th Schedule to the Constitution of
India was added by the:
1. Third Amendment Act
2. Fourth Amendment Act
3. First Amendment Act
4. Sixth Amendment Act
Which one of the following Schedules of
the Constitution of India contains
provisions regarding anti-defection?
1. Second Schedule
2. Fifth Schedule
3. Eighth Schedule
4. Tenth Schedule
How many languages were initially
included in the Eighth Schedule of the
Indian Constitution?
1. 14
2. 18
3. 16
4. 22
How many items are there in the
11th Schedule of the Constitution of India?
1. 22
2. 24
3. 29
4. 32
Anti-defection law is given in which
schedule of Indian constitution?
1. Second Schedule
2. Tenth Schedule
3. Third Schedule
4. Fourth Schedule
Under Schedule VII of the Constitution,
the subject 'Education' lies under which
List ?
1. State List
2. Sub List
3. Union List
4. Concurrent List
According to the Indian constitution, how many
languages have been given the status of official
language?
A. 15
B. 18
C. 22
D. 25
1. D
2. B
3. C
4. A
5.
he Constitution of India contains
________ schedules.
1. 11
2. 12
3. 14
4. 13
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