IV
SOME
ETHICAL AND MORAL PRINCIPLES
14.
The Second Vatican Council declared:
"If the media are to be correctly employed, it is essential that all who
use them know the principles of the moral order and apply them faithfully in
this domain."21 The moral order to which this refers is the order of the
law of human nature, binding upon all because it is "written on their
hearts" (Rom. 2:15) and embodies the imperatives of authentic human
fulfillment.
For Christians, moreover, the law of human
nature has a deeper dimension, a richer meaning. "Christ is the
?Beginning' who, having taken on human nature, definitively illumines it in its
constitutive elements and in its dynamism of charity towards God and
neighbor."22 Here we comprehend the deepest significance of human freedom:
that it makes possible an authentic moral response, in light of Jesus Christ,
to the call "to form our conscience, to make it the object of a continuous
conversion to what is true and to what is good."23
In this context, the media of social
communications have two options, and only two. Either they help human persons
to grow in their understanding and practice of what is true and good, or they
are destructive forces in conflict with human well being. That is entirely true
of advertising.
Against this background, then, we point to
this fundamental principle for people engaged in advertising: advertisers —
that is, those who commission, prepare or disseminate advertising — are morally
responsible for what they seek to move people to do; and this is a
responsibility also shared by publishers, broadcasting executives, and others
in the communications world, as well as by those who give commercial or political
endorsements, to the extent that they are involved in the advertising process.
If an instance of advertising seeks to move
people to choose and act rationally in morally good ways that are of true
benefit to themselves and others, persons involved in it do what is morally
good; if it seeks to move people to do evil deeds that are self-destructive and
destructive of authentic community, they do evil.
This applies also to the means and the
techniques of advertising: it is morally wrong to use manipulative,
exploitative, corrupt and corrupting methods of persuasion and motivation. In
this regard, we note special problems associated with so-called indirect
advertising that attempts to move people to act in certain ways — for example,
purchase particular products — without their being fully aware that they are
being swayed. The techniques involved here include showing certain products or
forms of behavior in superficially glamorous settings associated with
superficially glamorous people; in extreme cases, it may even involve the use
of subliminal messages.
Within this very general framework, we can
identify several moral principles that are particularly relevant to
advertising. We shall speak briefly of three: truthfulness, the dignity of the
human person, and social responsibility.
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