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Author Question: What is counterattitudinal advocacy? How is it related to notions of internal and external ... (Read 34 times)

nmorano1

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What is counterattitudinal advocacy? How is it related to notions of internal and external justification?
 
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 2

Dissonance theorists might assert that just as we suffer for the things we like, we also convince ourselves that we like the things for which we suffer. Use concepts related to the justification of effort to explain this statement.
 
  What will be an ideal response?



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Leostella20

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Answer to Question 1

Answer: Counterattitudinal advocacy involves publicly stating an attitude or opinion that is at odds with our private attitudes or opinions. When we advocate something we don't really believe, dissonance is aroused, and we are motivated to reduce it. When there is sufficient external justification (e.g., we had no choice) for our counterattitudinal advocacy, we have a good explanation for our behavior, and we need not change our private attitudes. When there is not sufficient external justification, we must find internal justification, and that typically takes the form of changing our private attitudes.

Answer to Question 2

Answer: It is threatening to our self-concepts as reasonable people to work hard in pursuit of a worthless goal. To invest effort for naught arouses dissonance, and we reduce our dissonance by convincing ourselves that our goal was worthwhile. We have no external justification for our effort, so we construct an internal justification by convincing ourselves that our effort was worth it. Thus, although sometimes we invest a considerable amount of effort in pursuit of things that are important to us, other times we convince ourselvesin the interest of reducing dissonance through self-justificationthat things for which we have suffered are importantafter the fact.




nmorano1

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Reply 2 on: Jun 22, 2018
Excellent


kjohnson

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Thanks for the timely response, appreciate it

 

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