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1.2: Persuasion, Defined

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    199279
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    Persuasion is powerful and it is pervasive.  But, what, exactly, is persuasion?

    Communication scholar and researcher Daniel O'Keefe argues that "definitions are troublesome because there will always be individuals who find a particular definition too broad, while others find it too narrow" (Brownell 83). O'Keefe makes a strong argument! Depending upon who one asked for a definition of persuasion–and when one asked–one would get very different answers.

    The word "persuasion" comes from the Latin verb persuadere, to persuade, from per, strongly, and suadere, to urge. The ancient Greek term for persuasion was Peithṓ.

    Some definitions of persuasion are very far-ranging, such as Gass and Seiter's: "persuasion involves one or more persons who are engaged in the activity of creating, reinforcing, modifying, or extinguishing beliefs, attitudes, intentions, motivations, and/or behaviors within the constraints of a given communication context" (40).

    Communication scholar and author Richard Perloff offers the following definition: "a symbolic process in which communicators try to convince other people to change their attitudes or behavior regarding an issue through the transmission of a message, in an atmosphere of free choice" (Perloff 8).

    A more concise definition is offered by Mirriam-Webster: "to move by argument, entreaty, or expostulation to a belief, position, or course of action ("Persuade," def. 1).

    The Moody College of Communication at UT-Austin offers another brief definition: "persuasion is a form of social influence in which an audience is intentionally encouraged to adopt an idea, attitude, or course of action by symbolic means" ("Persuasion and Social").

    We could go on (and on), but areas of overlap among common definitions of persuasion include intention, a positive result, free choice, and a lack of threat or harm (Powers 126).

    Penny Powers offers this definition of ethical persuasion:

    when a sender presents a true, honest, logical and complete argument that includes presentation of other real choices, has no personal benefit in the result, and when the receiver understands the arguments and has unrestrained freedom of choice and ability to choose, and all of this happens within a context of unhurried respect and equality, then this situation could be said to be persuasive and ethically justified (129).


    This page titled 1.2: Persuasion, Defined is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Paula Cardwel, Angela Prelip, and Jennifer Graber-Peters (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative (OERI)) .