Consumer Society, Secularization and Three Modes of Ethics
Abstract
An analysis of religious living in a consumer society can be achieved by taking three different dimensions of consumption into consideration. The first comprises rational processes that are clearly defined, both in terms of function and goals on the basis of capitalist production as a system of consumption. This process also covers transforming goods into merchandize with regard to the manufacturing of the symbolic and emblematic meaning of goods together with the commodity. The second dimension is the emergence of the consumer society in which the symbolic and emblematic order has been established through produced merchandize. In a consumer society, merchandize undertakes the construction of the aesthetic, ethical/moral, and cognitive rationalities and practices of the individuals belonging to that society. The third dimension is the emergence of the consumer world produced by the consumers of that society. Therefore, consumers are not passive objects of the consumption system but, in effect, active participants.
Source
Turkish Journal of Business EthicsVolume
11Issue
2Collections
- Makale Koleksiyonu [624]
- WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [1016]