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Emotional Experiences in Political Groups: The Case of the McCarthy Phenomenon

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  • Brown, Steven R.
  • Ellithorp, John D.

Abstract

In many ways the study of political groups from a theoretical point of view can be said not to have progressed much beyond the conceptions of Arthur F. Bentley. There have been countless studies of political groups, to be sure, but it seems most have been little more than the collection and presentation of ad hoc facts obtained from the testing of ad hoc hypotheses, the concepts of “group†and of “group behavior†having been little altered in the process.Much of the difficulty no doubt stems from Bentley's strict empiricism and the interpretation given his position by most social scientists who have aspired to translate him. When Bentley said that we know nothing of ideas and feelings but only of activity, he was merely reminding the social scientist to remain close to the operations of the phenomena he was studying. Activity, or behavior, can be worked with and studied directly, but it is questionable whether or not the same can be said of ideas and feelings. Scientific progress, Bentley would say, can be made only if one deals with what is visible and replicable. Critics as well as followers of Bentley, however, have interpreted him to mean that such matters as subjectivity are outside the pale of science, since subjectivity is presumed to be private, idiosyncratic, and nonreplicable.

Suggested Citation

  • Brown, Steven R. & Ellithorp, John D., 1970. "Emotional Experiences in Political Groups: The Case of the McCarthy Phenomenon," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 64(2), pages 349-366, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:64:y:1970:i:02:p:349-366_12
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