I have two theories, applying not just to rhyme but to traditional verse forms in general (i.e., formal constraints like rhyme, meter, alliteration, etc.):
In prehistory—when all knowledge was transmitted orally—constrained verse acted as a sort of verbal checksum to prevent transmitted knowledge from getting corrupted accidentally. And verse patterns became a mental flag indicating that whatever was being sung or recited was important knowledge worth the extra effort of casting into verse.
It’s been discovered in many different contexts that humans are attracted to information with novelty to predictability ratio of about 20–25%: if it’s much less than that we get bored, and if it’s much more than that we get lost and/or consider it gibberish. So adding a predictable element like a regular rhyme pattern gives the creator freedom to add more novel elements without losing the audience.
It’s also worth pointing out that rhyming is not the only way to get those pattern-recognition neurons firing. Meter in poetry/lyrics is all about this, and the Ancient Greeks knew all about it. They also knew all about mnemonic tropes (wine-dark sea) and other devices. Old English in particular built most of its poetry and songs around alliteration rather than rhyming.
I have two theories, applying not just to rhyme but to traditional verse forms in general (i.e., formal constraints like rhyme, meter, alliteration, etc.):
In prehistory—when all knowledge was transmitted orally—constrained verse acted as a sort of verbal checksum to prevent transmitted knowledge from getting corrupted accidentally. And verse patterns became a mental flag indicating that whatever was being sung or recited was important knowledge worth the extra effort of casting into verse.
It’s been discovered in many different contexts that humans are attracted to information with novelty to predictability ratio of about 20–25%: if it’s much less than that we get bored, and if it’s much more than that we get lost and/or consider it gibberish. So adding a predictable element like a regular rhyme pattern gives the creator freedom to add more novel elements without losing the audience.
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It’s also worth pointing out that rhyming is not the only way to get those pattern-recognition neurons firing. Meter in poetry/lyrics is all about this, and the Ancient Greeks knew all about it. They also knew all about mnemonic tropes (wine-dark sea) and other devices. Old English in particular built most of its poetry and songs around alliteration rather than rhyming.