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a) Truthfulness in Advertising
15.
Even today, some advertising is simply
and deliberately untrue. Generally speaking, though, the problem of truth in
advertising is somewhat more subtle: it is not that advertising says what is
overtly false, but that it can distort the truth by implying things that are
not so or withholding relevant facts. As Pope John Paul II points out, on both
the individual and social levels, truth and freedom are inseparable; without
truth as the basis, starting point and criterion of discernment, judgment,
choice and action, there can be no authentic exercise of freedom.24 The
Catechism of the Catholic Church, quoting the Second Vatican Council, insists
that the content of communication be "true and — within the limits set by
justice and charity — complete"; the content should, moreover, be
communicated "honestly and properly."25
To be sure, advertising, like other forms of
expression, has its own conventions and forms of stylization, and these must be
taken into account when discussing truthfulness. People take for granted some
rhetorical and symbolic exaggeration in advertising; within the limits of
recognized and accepted practice, this can be allowable.
But it is a fundamental principle that
advertising may not deliberately seek to deceive, whether it does that by what
it says, by what it implies, or by what it fails to say. "The proper
exercise of the right to information demands that the content of what is
communicated be true and, within the limits set by justice and charity,
complete. ... Included here is the obligation to avoid any manipulation of
truth for any reason."26
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