An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care

Practicing self-care has become prominent in today’s society. When one thinks of self-care, it's easy to think of products and a cozy routine. Many of such ideas are from businesses’ involvement. However, such practices often do not rely on scientific and medical evidence. This paper explores b...

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Main Author: Kok, Wenyi
Other Authors: Grace Boey
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165446
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1654462023-04-01T16:56:26Z An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care Kok, Wenyi Grace Boey School of Humanities gboey@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Philosophy Practicing self-care has become prominent in today’s society. When one thinks of self-care, it's easy to think of products and a cozy routine. Many of such ideas are from businesses’ involvement. However, such practices often do not rely on scientific and medical evidence. This paper explores businesses’ exploitation of the public’s belief regarding self-care from an epistemological standpoint. With references to specific companies involved in the topic of self-care, and drawing theories from Fricker, Goldman, Carson, Wokutch and Cox, businesses’ interests for profits, along with its strong influence can shape the public’s belief regarding self-care. I argue that in the long run, businesses’ involvement in the topic of self-care will cause negative epistemic effects on the public’s belief. This manifests itself in four ways: businesses’ lack of expertise, false claims made, lack of medical evidence and its usage of unreliable testimonies. Despite the understanding that there are businesses with a positive involvement in self-care, it may be a case of luck for certain individuals who unjustifiably believe so. Additionally, even with sufficient research and evidence, the public may still end up with false beliefs. I conclude that with consideration of all previous sections, businesses should not be a forefront epistemic resource when one practices self-care. Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy 2023-03-27T07:34:42Z 2023-03-27T07:34:42Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Kok, W. (2023). An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165446 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165446 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Philosophy
spellingShingle Humanities::Philosophy
Kok, Wenyi
An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
description Practicing self-care has become prominent in today’s society. When one thinks of self-care, it's easy to think of products and a cozy routine. Many of such ideas are from businesses’ involvement. However, such practices often do not rely on scientific and medical evidence. This paper explores businesses’ exploitation of the public’s belief regarding self-care from an epistemological standpoint. With references to specific companies involved in the topic of self-care, and drawing theories from Fricker, Goldman, Carson, Wokutch and Cox, businesses’ interests for profits, along with its strong influence can shape the public’s belief regarding self-care. I argue that in the long run, businesses’ involvement in the topic of self-care will cause negative epistemic effects on the public’s belief. This manifests itself in four ways: businesses’ lack of expertise, false claims made, lack of medical evidence and its usage of unreliable testimonies. Despite the understanding that there are businesses with a positive involvement in self-care, it may be a case of luck for certain individuals who unjustifiably believe so. Additionally, even with sufficient research and evidence, the public may still end up with false beliefs. I conclude that with consideration of all previous sections, businesses should not be a forefront epistemic resource when one practices self-care.
author2 Grace Boey
author_facet Grace Boey
Kok, Wenyi
format Final Year Project
author Kok, Wenyi
author_sort Kok, Wenyi
title An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
title_short An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
title_full An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
title_fullStr An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
title_full_unstemmed An epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
title_sort epistemic case study: how businesses exploit consumers in self-care
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165446
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