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Philosophy 223

Philosophy 223. Marketing, Advertising and Information. Moral Dimensions of Advertising. The aim of all marketing strategies or techniques is the sale. Producing and pricing goods is an important element of this, but advertising and product placement are the means by which the sale is promoted.

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Philosophy 223

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  1. Philosophy 223 Marketing, Advertising and Information

  2. Moral Dimensions of Advertising • The aim of all marketing strategies or techniques is the sale. Producing and pricing goods is an important element of this, but advertising and product placement are the means by which the sale is promoted. • We often assume that these aspects of marketing are a relatively benign aspect of contemporary business. After all, they involve no violation of employee rights or responsibilities, and no obvious abdication of corporate responsibility. • Furthermore, advertisement is directed at free individuals who are not externally coerced to accept the claims made by the advertisers. Despite these facts, there are significant ethical issues that arise in these contexts.

  3. A Question of Influence • The aim of marketing and product placement is to influence the purchasing decision of the consumer. • Common moral opinion suggests that there are ethically acceptable and unacceptable means of influencing consumer behavior. • Acceptable means include persuading, asking, informing and advising. • Unacceptable ways include threats, coercion, deception and lying.

  4. Influence and Manipulation • The unacceptable means of influencing people share a common feature: they all aim at manipulating the consumer. • Manipulation seeks to guide behavior without the consent or awareness of the target. • Manipulation is not control; it’s more subtle. • The better you understand how people think, the more effectively you can manipulate them. • Manipulation should be contrasted with forms of rational influence like persuasion.

  5. Manipulative Marketing • It should be easy to see that critics of advertising and product placement techniques focus on instances where the intent of the techniques is clearly manipulative. • Another area of concern is marketing research, in particular research aimed at consumer psychology.

  6. Is There Anything Wrong with Manipulation? • Before we examine some of the particular concerns raised by ethicists and business people, we should answer this question. • All of the general ethical approaches we’ve examined raise important objections to many forms of manipulation. • Manipulation is characterized by a failure to treat others with respect by treating them as a means rather than an end. • Manipulation thus tends to decrease overall utility by making social interaction more difficult. • Manipulation conflicts with many of the most commonly articulated virtues (ex. honesty).

  7. Deceptive and Unfair Marketing • Some marketing techniques are obviously unethical. • Prominent among these are techniques that seek to deceive consumers or seek an unfair advantage over competitors. • Is the “Sales at World Camera and Electronics” case (336) and example of deceptive or unfair marketing. • What was its intent? • Was the customer harmed?

  8. Deception and Manipulation in Advertising • Given the harms that arise from deceptive and unfair advertising, society has good reasons to target these forms of advertising. • The focus on intent seems promising. Perhaps we could target advertising that intends to deceive. • However, intent is difficult to discern, so some have argued that we should focus on effects. • In both cases, it seems necessary to agree on some definition of the qualities of a “reasonable consumer.”

  9. Galbraith and the Dependence Effect • Economist John Kenneth Galbraith argued that contrary to common assumptions, advertisement doesn’t just respond to demand, it in large measure creates it. Galbraith labeled this capacity the “Dependence Effect.” • Galbraith went on to argue that there are three negative consequences of the DE: • It reverses the law of supply and demand, making demand a function of supply. • It creates and encourages irrational consumer desires, which limit the efficiency of markets. • Advertising that creates demands undercuts consumer autonomy.

  10. Some Implications of the Dependence Effect • If Galbraith’s concerns are legitimate, there are a number of important consequences. • Undercutting consumer autonomy would violate traditional ethical standards. • Market exchanges which appear to increase overall satisfaction would actually not do so. • The reversal of the law of supply and demand significantly undercuts the democratic nature of markets and makes it difficult to justify the accumulation of wealth by a few individuals on the ground of their supposed responsiveness to consumer demand.

  11. The Dependence Effect and Autonomy • The thin wedge of this issue is the question of autonomy. • Is it the case that common forms of advertising undercut consumer autonomy? • Answering this question requires a distinction prepared for in our analysis of manipulation. • We saw there that undercutting autonomy does not require actually controlling a person. • That is, a person can act without constraint, but still not be acting autonomously.

  12. Autonomous Behavior vs. Autonomous Desire • We can account for the gap between action and autonomy, by noting a difference between autonomous behavior and autonomous desires. • If I act without constraint, I can in one sense be said to be behaving autonomously. • However, if the desires upon which I act are not autonomously chosen, then the lack of constraint does not guarantee autonomy. • Is the drug addict acting autonomously when they, without external interference, use drugs?

  13. A Framework for Understanding Desire • A way of understanding the apparent conflict lived by an addict it to draw a distinction between first-order and second-order desires. • A first-order desire is any desire I have at the moment. A second-order desire is one I have on the basis of a reflective consideration of my interests. • Autonomy requires this capacity for reflection. • It is thus the capacity to form and act in accordance with second-order desires which makes a person autonomous.

  14. Autonomy and the Addict • The addict may have strong first-order desires for that to which they are addicted, but any reflective individual in that situation is going to have strong second-order desires to be free of the addiction. • Given the analysis just offered, to the extent that the addict acts on their first-order desires rather than their second-order desires, they act non-autonomously.

  15. Autonomy and Advertising • Under what conditions are the desire-creating capacities of advertising going to be consistent with the autonomy of consumers? • Only in that situation where the creation of first-order desires does not conflict with legitimate, reflectively established second-order desires. • This is reflected in the “cooling-off” periods common in consumer protection law. • In other words, the fact that consumers often respond favorably to desire creating marketing techniques is no evidence of their acceptability. • Willingly participating in “therapeutic shopping” is not enough. The individual would have had to reflect upon the nature of such an enterprise and determined its appropriateness.

  16. Further Complications • Even this picture may fail to address the full complicity of advertising in undercutting consumer autonomy. • Persuasive advertising actively contests the development of the critical, reflective skills necessary for the formation of autonomous second-order desires. • The sheer volume of advertising which bombards us everyday renders even the most critical and reflective individuals incapable of immunizing themselves from autonomy-limiting first-order desire creation.

  17. Arrington, “Advertising and Behavior Control” • This article considers whether or not a common technique of advertising, puffery, illegitimately interferes with consumer autonomy via manipulation. • The author argues that generally it does not. • His argument rests on analysis of the concepts of desire, free choice, and manipulation.

  18. Puffery • Puffery is the practice of a seller making exaggerated or fanciful claims about a product or service. • Some argue that the use of puffery constitutes manipulation. • Examples: “Better ingredients, better pizza.” • Axe Body Spray

  19. Arrington on Autonomy and Desire • Autonomous Desire • We act autonomously when we act in a manner consistent with our second-order desires. • Autonomous Desire and Choice • Based on knowledge of information relevant to choice. Desire is only autonomous when it’s rational (ensures consistency). • Free Choice (Acting Freely) • We act freely when we do things for a reason.

  20. What about Manipulation? • As Arrington understands it, manipulation involves: • Intention • Causality • Guaranteed Control of Outcome

  21. Arrington’s Conclusion • Arrington argues that persuasive advertising typically does not undermine autonomy. • Consumers typically act freely (on reasons). • Consumers typically act on reasons they take to be good ones. • Consumers typically act on their second-order desires. • Consumers typically are not manipulated.

  22. Holley, “Information Disclosure in Sales” • This essay defends a rule or principle of disclosure for ethical sales. • How much information are sales people ethically required to disclose? Five levels of disclosure: • Minimal Information: buyer is solely responsible; • Modified Minimal Information: disclose only what is necessary to avoid risk; • Fairness Rule: safety information plus unavailable information; • Mutual Benefit Rule: safety information plus information needed for a reasonable judgment; • Maximal Information Rule: all relevant information.

  23. What’s Required? • Holley first considers if it would be appropriate to merely consider the interests of the consumer. What rule would you want if you were the consumer (the Golden Rule)? • Holley thinks that this focus ignores the appropriate advocacy of the salesperson. • This leads him to consider the two versions of the minimal information rule, but this seems to ignore legitimate interests of consumers. • Addressing the various ways in which consumers are informationally vulnerable leads him to reject the fairness rule. • He thus concludes that the mutual benefit rule is best, as it allows for product advocacy but protects consumer interests.

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