Well, it seems to me that in the future, without mass TV viewing to rely on, advertising is likely to be more targeted, dispersed, invasive and diverse.
More targeted.
See neuromarketing:, for example:
"Neuromarketing engages the use of Magnetic Resance Imaging (MRI), electroencephalography (EEG), biometrics, facial coding, eye tracking and other technologies to investigate and learn how consumers respond and feel when presented with products and/or related stimuli (Kolter et al., 2013). The concept of neuromarketing investigates the non-conscious processing of information in consumers brains (Agarwal & Dutta, 2015). Human decision-making is both a conscious and non-conscious process in the brain (Glanert, 2012). Human brains process over 90% of information non-consciously, below controlled awareness; this information has a large influence in the decision-making process (Agarwal & Dutta, 2015). "
More dispersed/invasive:
More on subways, buses, taxis, lifts, anywhere where people congregate. Louder, flashier etc.
More diverse:
Constant innovation. What was that movie with Cruise where he gets offered a Guinness by a hologram? Coming soon... — Baden
I should apologise for starting this with advertising; it has rather misled people. One can resist advertising, avoid it perhaps, but advertising is merely an example of a way of thinking about people that pervades the eduction system, politics, entertainment, the workplace, every facet of society.
Shall we start again with a different example? Psychology and education? — unenlightened
Other?
In English we say "I am cold."
In German, it's "I have cold."
Russians say: "The cold is upon me."
Greek scholars say that Homer should be read the Russian way. All the stuff we think of as internal psychic forces is external in Homer. It's like the psyche turned inside out.
They would probably think we see ourselves as divine. — Mongrel
aside from the problem that we don't have good comparable data from 75-100+ years ago for mental illnesses and general happiness/unhappiness... — Terrapin Station
I'd bet anything that apparent increases in minor mental maladies per capita are just as related to some combination of the following:
(1) People with psych degrees needing clients in order to sustain their careers; that encourages diagnoses of conditions that require regular visits,
(2) Pharmaceutical companies having similar motivations,
(3) People hoping to acquire some type of government assistance and/or excuses for special treatment at work/special employment situations — Terrapin Station
(4) Munchausen syndrome/factitious disorder, where people have a desire for attention/special treatment/etc. — Terrapin Station
Yes, all of the above applies. Diagnoses are needed for return visits, but even more important, diagnoses are needed to get paid by insurance companies. And I would add that it isn't all scam and racket. Some therapists really are very competent and helpful. (So ask yourself, what kind of scam do philosophers have going to justify their existences on college campuses--and who else bothers to employ them?) — Bitter Crank
Or, do you have some other starting point in mind? — Bitter Crank
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/other-minds/#2 (Thanks to Terrapin for the link).It is noteworthy that the other minds problem came to prominence as a philosophical problem only as recently as the nineteenth century, when John Stuart Mill gave us what is generally regarded as a version of the analogical inference to other minds. Mill's version has as its centerpiece the causal link between our mental states and our behavior. The problem was clearly enough waiting to be noted as far back as Descartes and his separation of mind from body and his view that only human animals had minds. However, it does not seem that Descartes noticed it as a separate problem. A similar situation would seem to apply with John Locke, given his belief that the mind of another is invisible (Locke, 111.ii.1, 404–405).
Before Mill, it would seem that Thomas Reid should be credited with seeing that there was a serious philosophical issue concerning other minds (Avramides 2001, ch., VI). Indeed, it seems that the first frequent use of the words ‘other minds’ is to be credited to him (Somerville 1989, 249). However, those minds are not observable. Nor is our belief that they exist to be reached or supported by reasoning. For Reid it is self-evident, an innate belief, that there are minds other than one's own.
The analogical inference to other minds held sway until about the middle of the twentieth century. Increasingly argued to be problematic, the analogical inference lost ground within philosophy. It was widely thought to be inadequate because of two of its features. The first was that the conclusion was not only uncheckable but was such that it was logically impossible to check up on it. The second was that the argument seemed to be an inductive generalization based on only one case. This second feature was thought to be problematic in itself but was thought by many to have as a consequence that each of us learns only from our own case what it is to be in pain or some other mental state. This consequence was thought to be completely unacceptable.
Presumably you're someone who sees advertising/marketing as an affront? We could explore why you feel that way about it. — Terrapin Station
but the so-called entertainment just causes more stress — Metaphysician Undercover
You know that the rise of psychological science allowed the mentally ill to be looked at non-judgmentally and therefore more compassionately. — Mongrel
Are you saying there are objective truths about you regardless of subjective judgement? — m-theory
The reason I say this is because psychology, as a whole, is equally responsible for even worse treatment of the mentally ill in many cases, at least if we use the presence of psychological language as our measure, and just to gauge by the 20th century. — Moliere
Why do you see it as causing stress? (I work in the entertainment industry, by the way.) — Terrapin Station
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