Omnipresence of Advertising:
Nowadays advertising seems to be ubiquitous. We notice it everywhere, and we seem to intuitively grasp its pervasive nature. But is it possible to define it? This book is a pioneering attempt to offer a definition of the omnipresence of advertising
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Frankfurt a.M.
Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
2024
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Schriftenreihe: | Studies in Philosophy, History of Ideas and Modern Societies Series
v.27 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Zusammenfassung: | Nowadays advertising seems to be ubiquitous. We notice it everywhere, and we seem to intuitively grasp its pervasive nature. But is it possible to define it? This book is a pioneering attempt to offer a definition of the omnipresence of advertising |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (206 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9783631920237 |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- HalfTitle -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Content -- Acknowledgments -- 0 Setting the Scene -- 0.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising: Vignettes -- 0.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising: An Introduction -- 0.3. Focus on Personal Autonomy -- 0.4. Sources of Inspiration -- 0.4.1. American Legal Doctrine -- 0.4.2. Feminist Ethics -- 0.4.3. Urban Studies and Spatial Thinking -- 0.5. The Spatial and Temporal Aspects of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 0.5.2. The Spatial Aspect -- 0.5.3. The Temporal Aspect -- 0.6. Important Definitions -- 0.7. How to Read This Book and How It Came to Be -- 1 Portraying the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What Does the Term "Omnipresence" Mean? -- 1.3. Everyday Manifestations of the Omnipresence of Advertising4 -- 1.3.1. Jails -- 1.3.2. Police Service -- 1.3.3. Fire and Rescue Service -- 1.3.4. Medical Service -- 1.3.5. Schools -- 1.3.6. Sports Facilities and Broadcasts -- 1.3.7. Means of Entertainment: Videogames, Films, Books, Songs -- 1.3.8. Means of Transport -- 1.3.9. Private Cars and Houses -- 1.3.10. Church Buildings and Church Grounds -- 1.3.11. More Municipal Advertising: Green Areas, Pouring Rights -- 1.3.12. Municipal Marketing in Public Toilets -- 1.3.13. Branded Nature Outside the City -- 1.3.14. Human Body -- 1.4. First Approximation at a Definition of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.5. Conclusions -- 2 Arguing Against the Omnipresence of Advertising Through the Lens of Relational Autonomy -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The Theoretical Part: Autonomy -- 2.2.1. Personal Autonomy -- 2.2.2. Relational Autonomy -- 2.2.3. An Amalgam of Meyers and Sneddon, and an Additional Element -- 2.2.4. Autonomy of Choice and Autonomy of Persons -- 2.2.5. Autonomy of Choice -- 2.2.6. Self-Shaping, Autonomy Skills, and the Dynamic Self -- 2.2.7. Self-Trust (and Trust) | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.2.8. Self-Knowledge and Self-Discovery -- 2.3. The Argumentative Part: A Critique of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 2.3.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing Autonomy of Choice -- 2.3.1.1. The Argument from a Captive Audience -- 2.3.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing the Development, Maintenance, and Exercise of Autonomy Competence -- 2.3.2.1. The Argument from Hindering Critical Reasoning -- 2.3.2.2. The Argument from Non-Benign Objectification and the Erosion of Trust -- 2.4. Conclusions -- 3 Conclusions: Towards Ad-Freedom -- 3.1. Definition-Related Conclusions -- 3.1.1. A Brief Summary of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.1.2. The Final Step of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.2. Objection-Related and Argument-Related Conclusions -- 3.2.1. The Objection -- 3.2.2. Answering the Objection -- 3.3. Solution-Related Conclusions -- 3.3.1. Solution-Related Concluding Thoughts and Guidelines -- 3.3.2. Solutions Are Possible: An Example -- 3.3.3. Less Than Ideal Solutions: The Satisfactory Level -- 3.4. To Close and to Inspire -- 3.4.1. Ad-Freedom -- 3.4.2. Paid Non-Exposure to Advertising -- 3.4.3. Paths for Further Study -- 3.4.4. Final Remarks -- 4 The Legal Appendix -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Commercial Speech in the American Legal Discourse -- 4.2.1. Commercial Speech Versus Noncommercial Speech -- 4.2.2. The Value of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.3. Freedom of Commercial Speech and Its Limitations -- 4.2.4. The Captive Audience Doctrine -- 4.2.5. The Pervasiveness of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.5.1. Charles Black: An Early Intuition (1950s) -- 4.2.5.2. R. George Wright: Right on Time (1990s) -- 5 The Ethical Appendix -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The Autonomist Analysis of Advertising in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.2.1. Arrington's Frankfurtian Autonomist Defense of Advertising and Its Criticisms | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2.2. Sneddon's Taylorian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.2.3. Cunningham's Nogglian Autonomist Defense of Advertising -- 5.2.4. Villarán's Kantian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.3. The Omnipresence of Advertising Mentioned in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.3.1. Edward Spence, in Collaboration with Brett Van Heekeren -- 5.3.1.1. The Freedom of Choice Argument/The Privacy Argument -- 5.3.1.2. The Suspension of Discontent Argument -- 5.3.1.3. The Time-Out Argument -- 5.3.1.4. The Preservation of Aesthetic Space Argument -- 5.3.1.5. The Deception Argument -- 5.3.1.6. The Overload Argument -- 5.3.1.7. Spence's and Van Heekeren's Concluding Remarks -- 5.3.1.8. Spence's Additional Argument of 2018 -- 5.3.2. Michael Sandel -- 5.3.2.1. The Argument from Freedom of Choice or the Laissez-Faire Argument -- 5.3.2.2. The Argument from Coercion and Unfairness -- 5.3.2.3. The Argument from Degradation and Corruption -- 5.3.2.4. The Argument from Pollution -- 5.3.3. Andrew Sneddon -- 5.3.3.1. The Argument from Cognitive, Volitional, and Ontological Impoverishment -- 6 The Short Linguistic Appendix -- References | |
520 | |a Nowadays advertising seems to be ubiquitous. We notice it everywhere, and we seem to intuitively grasp its pervasive nature. But is it possible to define it? This book is a pioneering attempt to offer a definition of the omnipresence of advertising | ||
650 | 4 | |a Advertising | |
700 | 1 | |a Iwanowska, Joanna |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Hartman, Jan |t Omnipresence of Advertising |d Frankfurt a.M. : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften,c2024 |z 9783631905838 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Hartman, Jan |
author_facet | Hartman, Jan |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Hartman, Jan |
author_variant | j h jh |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV050102562 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Cover -- HalfTitle -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Content -- Acknowledgments -- 0 Setting the Scene -- 0.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising: Vignettes -- 0.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising: An Introduction -- 0.3. Focus on Personal Autonomy -- 0.4. Sources of Inspiration -- 0.4.1. American Legal Doctrine -- 0.4.2. Feminist Ethics -- 0.4.3. Urban Studies and Spatial Thinking -- 0.5. The Spatial and Temporal Aspects of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 0.5.2. The Spatial Aspect -- 0.5.3. The Temporal Aspect -- 0.6. Important Definitions -- 0.7. How to Read This Book and How It Came to Be -- 1 Portraying the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What Does the Term "Omnipresence" Mean? -- 1.3. Everyday Manifestations of the Omnipresence of Advertising4 -- 1.3.1. Jails -- 1.3.2. Police Service -- 1.3.3. Fire and Rescue Service -- 1.3.4. Medical Service -- 1.3.5. Schools -- 1.3.6. Sports Facilities and Broadcasts -- 1.3.7. Means of Entertainment: Videogames, Films, Books, Songs -- 1.3.8. Means of Transport -- 1.3.9. Private Cars and Houses -- 1.3.10. Church Buildings and Church Grounds -- 1.3.11. More Municipal Advertising: Green Areas, Pouring Rights -- 1.3.12. Municipal Marketing in Public Toilets -- 1.3.13. Branded Nature Outside the City -- 1.3.14. Human Body -- 1.4. First Approximation at a Definition of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.5. Conclusions -- 2 Arguing Against the Omnipresence of Advertising Through the Lens of Relational Autonomy -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The Theoretical Part: Autonomy -- 2.2.1. Personal Autonomy -- 2.2.2. Relational Autonomy -- 2.2.3. An Amalgam of Meyers and Sneddon, and an Additional Element -- 2.2.4. Autonomy of Choice and Autonomy of Persons -- 2.2.5. Autonomy of Choice -- 2.2.6. Self-Shaping, Autonomy Skills, and the Dynamic Self -- 2.2.7. Self-Trust (and Trust) 2.2.8. Self-Knowledge and Self-Discovery -- 2.3. The Argumentative Part: A Critique of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 2.3.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing Autonomy of Choice -- 2.3.1.1. The Argument from a Captive Audience -- 2.3.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing the Development, Maintenance, and Exercise of Autonomy Competence -- 2.3.2.1. The Argument from Hindering Critical Reasoning -- 2.3.2.2. The Argument from Non-Benign Objectification and the Erosion of Trust -- 2.4. Conclusions -- 3 Conclusions: Towards Ad-Freedom -- 3.1. Definition-Related Conclusions -- 3.1.1. A Brief Summary of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.1.2. The Final Step of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.2. Objection-Related and Argument-Related Conclusions -- 3.2.1. The Objection -- 3.2.2. Answering the Objection -- 3.3. Solution-Related Conclusions -- 3.3.1. Solution-Related Concluding Thoughts and Guidelines -- 3.3.2. Solutions Are Possible: An Example -- 3.3.3. Less Than Ideal Solutions: The Satisfactory Level -- 3.4. To Close and to Inspire -- 3.4.1. Ad-Freedom -- 3.4.2. Paid Non-Exposure to Advertising -- 3.4.3. Paths for Further Study -- 3.4.4. Final Remarks -- 4 The Legal Appendix -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Commercial Speech in the American Legal Discourse -- 4.2.1. Commercial Speech Versus Noncommercial Speech -- 4.2.2. The Value of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.3. Freedom of Commercial Speech and Its Limitations -- 4.2.4. The Captive Audience Doctrine -- 4.2.5. The Pervasiveness of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.5.1. Charles Black: An Early Intuition (1950s) -- 4.2.5.2. R. George Wright: Right on Time (1990s) -- 5 The Ethical Appendix -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The Autonomist Analysis of Advertising in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.2.1. Arrington's Frankfurtian Autonomist Defense of Advertising and Its Criticisms 5.2.2. Sneddon's Taylorian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.2.3. Cunningham's Nogglian Autonomist Defense of Advertising -- 5.2.4. Villarán's Kantian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.3. The Omnipresence of Advertising Mentioned in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.3.1. Edward Spence, in Collaboration with Brett Van Heekeren -- 5.3.1.1. The Freedom of Choice Argument/The Privacy Argument -- 5.3.1.2. The Suspension of Discontent Argument -- 5.3.1.3. The Time-Out Argument -- 5.3.1.4. The Preservation of Aesthetic Space Argument -- 5.3.1.5. The Deception Argument -- 5.3.1.6. The Overload Argument -- 5.3.1.7. Spence's and Van Heekeren's Concluding Remarks -- 5.3.1.8. Spence's Additional Argument of 2018 -- 5.3.2. Michael Sandel -- 5.3.2.1. The Argument from Freedom of Choice or the Laissez-Faire Argument -- 5.3.2.2. The Argument from Coercion and Unfairness -- 5.3.2.3. The Argument from Degradation and Corruption -- 5.3.2.4. The Argument from Pollution -- 5.3.3. Andrew Sneddon -- 5.3.3.1. The Argument from Cognitive, Volitional, and Ontological Impoverishment -- 6 The Short Linguistic Appendix -- References |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC31717941 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC31717941 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL31717941 (OCoLC)1460464119 (DE-599)BVBBV050102562 |
dewey-full | 659.1 |
dewey-hundreds | 600 - Technology (Applied sciences) |
dewey-ones | 659 - Advertising and public relations |
dewey-raw | 659.1 |
dewey-search | 659.1 |
dewey-sort | 3659.1 |
dewey-tens | 650 - Management and auxiliary services |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-18T19:05:07Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783631920237 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035439724 |
oclc_num | 1460464119 |
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owner | DE-2070s |
owner_facet | DE-2070s |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource (206 Seiten) |
psigel | ZDB-30-PQE ZDB-30-PQE HWR_PDA_PQE |
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series2 | Studies in Philosophy, History of Ideas and Modern Societies Series |
spelling | Hartman, Jan Verfasser aut Omnipresence of Advertising 1st ed Frankfurt a.M. Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften 2024 ©2024 1 Online-Ressource (206 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Studies in Philosophy, History of Ideas and Modern Societies Series v.27 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Cover -- HalfTitle -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Content -- Acknowledgments -- 0 Setting the Scene -- 0.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising: Vignettes -- 0.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising: An Introduction -- 0.3. Focus on Personal Autonomy -- 0.4. Sources of Inspiration -- 0.4.1. American Legal Doctrine -- 0.4.2. Feminist Ethics -- 0.4.3. Urban Studies and Spatial Thinking -- 0.5. The Spatial and Temporal Aspects of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 0.5.2. The Spatial Aspect -- 0.5.3. The Temporal Aspect -- 0.6. Important Definitions -- 0.7. How to Read This Book and How It Came to Be -- 1 Portraying the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What Does the Term "Omnipresence" Mean? -- 1.3. Everyday Manifestations of the Omnipresence of Advertising4 -- 1.3.1. Jails -- 1.3.2. Police Service -- 1.3.3. Fire and Rescue Service -- 1.3.4. Medical Service -- 1.3.5. Schools -- 1.3.6. Sports Facilities and Broadcasts -- 1.3.7. Means of Entertainment: Videogames, Films, Books, Songs -- 1.3.8. Means of Transport -- 1.3.9. Private Cars and Houses -- 1.3.10. Church Buildings and Church Grounds -- 1.3.11. More Municipal Advertising: Green Areas, Pouring Rights -- 1.3.12. Municipal Marketing in Public Toilets -- 1.3.13. Branded Nature Outside the City -- 1.3.14. Human Body -- 1.4. First Approximation at a Definition of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.5. Conclusions -- 2 Arguing Against the Omnipresence of Advertising Through the Lens of Relational Autonomy -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The Theoretical Part: Autonomy -- 2.2.1. Personal Autonomy -- 2.2.2. Relational Autonomy -- 2.2.3. An Amalgam of Meyers and Sneddon, and an Additional Element -- 2.2.4. Autonomy of Choice and Autonomy of Persons -- 2.2.5. Autonomy of Choice -- 2.2.6. Self-Shaping, Autonomy Skills, and the Dynamic Self -- 2.2.7. Self-Trust (and Trust) 2.2.8. Self-Knowledge and Self-Discovery -- 2.3. The Argumentative Part: A Critique of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 2.3.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing Autonomy of Choice -- 2.3.1.1. The Argument from a Captive Audience -- 2.3.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing the Development, Maintenance, and Exercise of Autonomy Competence -- 2.3.2.1. The Argument from Hindering Critical Reasoning -- 2.3.2.2. The Argument from Non-Benign Objectification and the Erosion of Trust -- 2.4. Conclusions -- 3 Conclusions: Towards Ad-Freedom -- 3.1. Definition-Related Conclusions -- 3.1.1. A Brief Summary of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.1.2. The Final Step of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.2. Objection-Related and Argument-Related Conclusions -- 3.2.1. The Objection -- 3.2.2. Answering the Objection -- 3.3. Solution-Related Conclusions -- 3.3.1. Solution-Related Concluding Thoughts and Guidelines -- 3.3.2. Solutions Are Possible: An Example -- 3.3.3. Less Than Ideal Solutions: The Satisfactory Level -- 3.4. To Close and to Inspire -- 3.4.1. Ad-Freedom -- 3.4.2. Paid Non-Exposure to Advertising -- 3.4.3. Paths for Further Study -- 3.4.4. Final Remarks -- 4 The Legal Appendix -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Commercial Speech in the American Legal Discourse -- 4.2.1. Commercial Speech Versus Noncommercial Speech -- 4.2.2. The Value of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.3. Freedom of Commercial Speech and Its Limitations -- 4.2.4. The Captive Audience Doctrine -- 4.2.5. The Pervasiveness of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.5.1. Charles Black: An Early Intuition (1950s) -- 4.2.5.2. R. George Wright: Right on Time (1990s) -- 5 The Ethical Appendix -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The Autonomist Analysis of Advertising in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.2.1. Arrington's Frankfurtian Autonomist Defense of Advertising and Its Criticisms 5.2.2. Sneddon's Taylorian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.2.3. Cunningham's Nogglian Autonomist Defense of Advertising -- 5.2.4. Villarán's Kantian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.3. The Omnipresence of Advertising Mentioned in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.3.1. Edward Spence, in Collaboration with Brett Van Heekeren -- 5.3.1.1. The Freedom of Choice Argument/The Privacy Argument -- 5.3.1.2. The Suspension of Discontent Argument -- 5.3.1.3. The Time-Out Argument -- 5.3.1.4. The Preservation of Aesthetic Space Argument -- 5.3.1.5. The Deception Argument -- 5.3.1.6. The Overload Argument -- 5.3.1.7. Spence's and Van Heekeren's Concluding Remarks -- 5.3.1.8. Spence's Additional Argument of 2018 -- 5.3.2. Michael Sandel -- 5.3.2.1. The Argument from Freedom of Choice or the Laissez-Faire Argument -- 5.3.2.2. The Argument from Coercion and Unfairness -- 5.3.2.3. The Argument from Degradation and Corruption -- 5.3.2.4. The Argument from Pollution -- 5.3.3. Andrew Sneddon -- 5.3.3.1. The Argument from Cognitive, Volitional, and Ontological Impoverishment -- 6 The Short Linguistic Appendix -- References Nowadays advertising seems to be ubiquitous. We notice it everywhere, and we seem to intuitively grasp its pervasive nature. But is it possible to define it? This book is a pioneering attempt to offer a definition of the omnipresence of advertising Advertising Iwanowska, Joanna Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Hartman, Jan Omnipresence of Advertising Frankfurt a.M. : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften,c2024 9783631905838 |
spellingShingle | Hartman, Jan Omnipresence of Advertising Cover -- HalfTitle -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Content -- Acknowledgments -- 0 Setting the Scene -- 0.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising: Vignettes -- 0.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising: An Introduction -- 0.3. Focus on Personal Autonomy -- 0.4. Sources of Inspiration -- 0.4.1. American Legal Doctrine -- 0.4.2. Feminist Ethics -- 0.4.3. Urban Studies and Spatial Thinking -- 0.5. The Spatial and Temporal Aspects of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 0.5.2. The Spatial Aspect -- 0.5.3. The Temporal Aspect -- 0.6. Important Definitions -- 0.7. How to Read This Book and How It Came to Be -- 1 Portraying the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What Does the Term "Omnipresence" Mean? -- 1.3. Everyday Manifestations of the Omnipresence of Advertising4 -- 1.3.1. Jails -- 1.3.2. Police Service -- 1.3.3. Fire and Rescue Service -- 1.3.4. Medical Service -- 1.3.5. Schools -- 1.3.6. Sports Facilities and Broadcasts -- 1.3.7. Means of Entertainment: Videogames, Films, Books, Songs -- 1.3.8. Means of Transport -- 1.3.9. Private Cars and Houses -- 1.3.10. Church Buildings and Church Grounds -- 1.3.11. More Municipal Advertising: Green Areas, Pouring Rights -- 1.3.12. Municipal Marketing in Public Toilets -- 1.3.13. Branded Nature Outside the City -- 1.3.14. Human Body -- 1.4. First Approximation at a Definition of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 1.5. Conclusions -- 2 Arguing Against the Omnipresence of Advertising Through the Lens of Relational Autonomy -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The Theoretical Part: Autonomy -- 2.2.1. Personal Autonomy -- 2.2.2. Relational Autonomy -- 2.2.3. An Amalgam of Meyers and Sneddon, and an Additional Element -- 2.2.4. Autonomy of Choice and Autonomy of Persons -- 2.2.5. Autonomy of Choice -- 2.2.6. Self-Shaping, Autonomy Skills, and the Dynamic Self -- 2.2.7. Self-Trust (and Trust) 2.2.8. Self-Knowledge and Self-Discovery -- 2.3. The Argumentative Part: A Critique of the Omnipresence of Advertising -- 2.3.1. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing Autonomy of Choice -- 2.3.1.1. The Argument from a Captive Audience -- 2.3.2. The Omnipresence of Advertising Influencing the Development, Maintenance, and Exercise of Autonomy Competence -- 2.3.2.1. The Argument from Hindering Critical Reasoning -- 2.3.2.2. The Argument from Non-Benign Objectification and the Erosion of Trust -- 2.4. Conclusions -- 3 Conclusions: Towards Ad-Freedom -- 3.1. Definition-Related Conclusions -- 3.1.1. A Brief Summary of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.1.2. The Final Step of the Definitional Exploration -- 3.2. Objection-Related and Argument-Related Conclusions -- 3.2.1. The Objection -- 3.2.2. Answering the Objection -- 3.3. Solution-Related Conclusions -- 3.3.1. Solution-Related Concluding Thoughts and Guidelines -- 3.3.2. Solutions Are Possible: An Example -- 3.3.3. Less Than Ideal Solutions: The Satisfactory Level -- 3.4. To Close and to Inspire -- 3.4.1. Ad-Freedom -- 3.4.2. Paid Non-Exposure to Advertising -- 3.4.3. Paths for Further Study -- 3.4.4. Final Remarks -- 4 The Legal Appendix -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Commercial Speech in the American Legal Discourse -- 4.2.1. Commercial Speech Versus Noncommercial Speech -- 4.2.2. The Value of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.3. Freedom of Commercial Speech and Its Limitations -- 4.2.4. The Captive Audience Doctrine -- 4.2.5. The Pervasiveness of Commercial Speech -- 4.2.5.1. Charles Black: An Early Intuition (1950s) -- 4.2.5.2. R. George Wright: Right on Time (1990s) -- 5 The Ethical Appendix -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The Autonomist Analysis of Advertising in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.2.1. Arrington's Frankfurtian Autonomist Defense of Advertising and Its Criticisms 5.2.2. Sneddon's Taylorian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.2.3. Cunningham's Nogglian Autonomist Defense of Advertising -- 5.2.4. Villarán's Kantian Autonomist Criticism of Advertising -- 5.3. The Omnipresence of Advertising Mentioned in the Ethical Discourse -- 5.3.1. Edward Spence, in Collaboration with Brett Van Heekeren -- 5.3.1.1. The Freedom of Choice Argument/The Privacy Argument -- 5.3.1.2. The Suspension of Discontent Argument -- 5.3.1.3. The Time-Out Argument -- 5.3.1.4. The Preservation of Aesthetic Space Argument -- 5.3.1.5. The Deception Argument -- 5.3.1.6. The Overload Argument -- 5.3.1.7. Spence's and Van Heekeren's Concluding Remarks -- 5.3.1.8. Spence's Additional Argument of 2018 -- 5.3.2. Michael Sandel -- 5.3.2.1. The Argument from Freedom of Choice or the Laissez-Faire Argument -- 5.3.2.2. The Argument from Coercion and Unfairness -- 5.3.2.3. The Argument from Degradation and Corruption -- 5.3.2.4. The Argument from Pollution -- 5.3.3. Andrew Sneddon -- 5.3.3.1. The Argument from Cognitive, Volitional, and Ontological Impoverishment -- 6 The Short Linguistic Appendix -- References Advertising |
title | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_auth | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_exact_search | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_full | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_fullStr | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_full_unstemmed | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_short | Omnipresence of Advertising |
title_sort | omnipresence of advertising |
topic | Advertising |
topic_facet | Advertising |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hartmanjan omnipresenceofadvertising AT iwanowskajoanna omnipresenceofadvertising |