The word 'dissonance' entered English in the 1570s from Late Latin 'dissonantia,' meaning 'discord' or 'disagreement.' Its Latin ancestor 'dissonāre' combines 'dis-' (apart, away) with 'sonāre' (to sound): dissonance is, etymologically, sounds that pull apart, that refuse to blend. The word arrived as a technical term of music theory and remained largely confined to that domain for nearly four centuries, until a single coinage in 1957 launched it into the vocabulary of every educated English speaker.
In Western music theory, dissonance names the quality of intervals and chords that sound tense, unstable, or harsh — the opposite of consonance. The distinction is among the oldest in music theory, traceable to the Pythagorean discovery that pleasing intervals correspond to simple mathematical ratios (the octave is 2:1, the perfect fifth is 3:2) while dissonant intervals correspond to more complex ratios. The Pythagoreans treated consonance and dissonance as reflections of cosmic mathematical order, and this quasi-mystical interpretation persisted through medieval music theory, where the tritone — the interval spanning three whole tones — was labeled 'diabolus in musica' (the devil in music) and was subject to strict compositional prohibitions.
The treatment of dissonance is one of the defining characteristics of any musical style. In medieval polyphony, dissonance was rare and carefully controlled, permitted only as a brief passing event between consonant notes. In Renaissance counterpoint, the rules relaxed slightly: dissonance was allowed on weak beats if approached and left by stepwise motion. The Baroque and Classical periods developed an elaborate grammar of dissonance and resolution, in which dissonant chords create tension that resolves to consonant chords — the dominant seventh chord resolving to the tonic is the most familiar example. This tension-and-release pattern became the
The twentieth century shattered this framework. Arnold Schoenberg, writing in his 1911 treatise 'Harmonielehre,' argued that the distinction between consonance and dissonance was not absolute but a matter of degree — that dissonances were merely 'more remote consonances.' His twelve-tone method, developed in the 1920s, treated all twelve chromatic pitches as equal, abandoning the hierarchies that had governed Western music for centuries. Later composers went further: Edgard Varèse described his music as 'organized sound' and rejected the consonance-dissonance distinction entirely.
But the word's most famous modern usage comes not from music but from psychology. In 1957, the American social psychologist Leon Festinger published 'A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance,' introducing a concept that would become one of the most cited and debated ideas in the social sciences. Cognitive dissonance, in Festinger's formulation, is the mental discomfort experienced when a person holds two contradictory beliefs, values, or attitudes simultaneously. The mind, like the ear, seeks resolution: a smoker who knows that smoking causes cancer experiences cognitive dissonance, and typically resolves
Festinger chose the musical metaphor deliberately. The theory posits that contradictory cognitions produce a kind of mental friction analogous to the acoustic friction of dissonant notes — an aversive state that motivates the individual to restore cognitive consonance, just as a composer resolves a dissonant chord to a consonant one. The metaphor proved so apt that 'cognitive dissonance' transcended academic psychology and entered everyday language. People routinely describe the uncomfortable awareness of their own inconsistencies as 'cognitive dissonance,' often without knowing they are invoking
The Latin root 'sonāre' that underlies 'dissonance' connects it to a vast family of English words: consonance (sounding together), resonance (sounding back), unison (one sound), sonic, sonorous, sonnet, sonata, sonar, and the grammatical term 'consonant.' The prefix 'dis-' (apart) similarly connects 'dissonance' to words like 'discord' (hearts apart), 'dissent' (feelings apart), 'dispute' (thinking apart), and 'dissolve' (loosening apart).
The trajectory of 'dissonance' — from a narrow musical term through centuries of confined usage to its explosive expansion via Festinger's coinage — illustrates how a single creative metaphor can transform a word's reach. Today, most English speakers who use 'dissonance' are not thinking about music at all. They are thinking about the uncomfortable gap between what they believe and what they do, or between competing ideas they cannot reconcile. Yet the musical origin persists in the word's connotations: dissonance still carries