That thread topic was “Should hate speech be allowed”, genius. — NOS4A2
“Say two companies want to sell similar consumer products. Company A hires an ad agency and spends a couple million on various forms of advertising. Company B does not advertise at all.
If company A sells more of its product then that is evidence that the advertising was influential.”
—praxis
I think it goes without saying that people are more likely to purchase a product they know about than one they don’t. In that sense they are “influential”.
But I cannot say the advertisement acted upon the one who saw it, which terms such as “influence”, “encourage”, “incite” presuppose. The advertisement cannot act upon the viewer in such a way that alters or even effects their buying choices, for the simple reason of the first law of motion. — NOS4A2
This is mind-numbingly self-contradictory. You agree with ad influence (in one sense) and then claim that, due to the first law of motion, ads cannot act upon buyers.
I think it goes without saying that people are more likely to purchase a product they know about than one they don’t. In that sense they are “influential”. — NOS4A2
If it is true that speech acts increase certain effects, then we have to deal with that danger. IOW you are saying that a problem with what I am saying is that it might lead to certain negative consequences. But that has nothing to do with it being true or not. It is as if you are conceding it is true, but it would be better not to believe it since it will lead to X. But of course if the effect is an increase in crime, then the people committing the crimes are still those easily influenced by certain speech acts. They are dangerous people. Speech acts continue, people have violent potentials, some of them. This could be seen as why both groups are dangerous. The guy who drives the bank robbers to the bank and knows they are planning to rob the bank, well, he didn't make them rob the bank. They could have chosen to go into the florist's next door and buy flowers. Yet, we manage to hold him responsible for the crime also. Even though driving to a bank is legal, generally. So we are not forced to treat the direct violent criminals as responsibility free. IOW if we put the driver in prison it does not mean that the guys who went into the bank with guns are not responsible for their actions.That’s one of the dangerous aspects of this theory: it risks absolving people of guilt in certain crimes, — NOS4A2
Not a contradiction. You or I reading or hearing an ad is us acting upon the ad, not the other way about. — NOS4A2
You wrote that ads inform and in that sense they’re influential. The information contained within ads is received from the ads and our actions may be influenced by that information. Prior to acquiring ad information, you or I act in particular ways, like buying a specific brand of tea, for example, but subsequent to experiencing an ad we might switch to a different brand of tea. In this way, an advertisement may act upon us, may affect our behavior.
You might say that you or I could interact with an ad, if indeed the ad were interactive. Do I need to explain what interactive means?
the act of switching to a brand of tea are acts performed by and chosen by us, not the advertisement. — NOS4A2
I think it goes without saying that people are more likely to purchase a product they know about than one they don’t. In that sense they [advertisements] are “influential”. — NOS4A2
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