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What is Post-Truth

Open Access Implications for Sustainable Social, Political, and Economic Development
The Oxford Dictionaries web page defines post-truth as an adjective relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotional and personal belief.
Published in Chapter:
The Role of Information Institutions in Promoting Information Literacy and Access to Information for Sustainable Development in the Post-Truth Era: The Case of Sweden
Proscovia Svärd (Department of Information Systems and Technology, Mid Sweden University, Sweden & Department of Information Science, University of South Africa, South Africa)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-5018-2.ch005
Abstract
The right to access government information has been a key element of sustainable development since the 1992 Rio Declaration. It is further recognized in the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Therefore, governments are through open government initiatives making information available to the citizens. This is based on a supposition that everyone is information literate and yet this is not the case. Information literacy is defined as the ability to be able to act on the information that is provided to us citizens. Being able to locate, evaluate, and ethically use information is an ability that is crucial to the citizens' participation in society. It requires individuals to be in possession of a set of skills that can enable them to recognize when information is needed to be able to locate, evaluate, and use it effectively. Information institutions have been the gateways to knowledge, and hence, their resources and services have been crucial to the development of information literate, creative, and innovative societies. This study sought to establish how the information institutions in Sweden were promoting information literacy in accordance with Sustainable Development Goal 16 amidst the post-truth era. The author has applied a qualitative research methodology where interviews have been used as a data collecting technique.
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Media Ethics: Evaluation of Television News in the Context of the Media and Ethics Relationship
It refers unreal things that contains irrelevance of facts. It is related to an erosion of the common.
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Informatics Truth: News Media in the Post-Truth Era
The loss of the reality of the event or information rather than a reference to the aftermath of an event or information.
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Virtual Resistance of “Çiftlik (Farm) Bank Scapegoats” and Discursive Atonement of “Being Scammed”
It is a social production in which convictions and beliefs are more effective than objective reality.
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Cognitive Authority, Accountability, and the Anatomy of Lies: Experiments to Detect Fake News in Digital Environments
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Media Literacy for Political Cognition in Higher Education: A Solution-Centered Approach
Relating to a political climate where individuals rely upon emotion and personal beliefs rather than objective facts.
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Post-Truth and Marketing Communication in Technological Age
It relates or demonstrates those circumstances where the objective facts are not important or worth enough for shaping public opinion and appeals to emotion or personal beliefs play an important role than the objective analysis.
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Behind the Post-Truth World: A Philosophical Perspective on Information and Media Literacy
Circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.
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Moving From Postmodernism to Metamodernism
An era in the 21 st century in which false information and fake news are prevalent particularly in social media and networked culture.
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What the Post-Truth Era Means: A Short Glimpse
It means that the truth loses importance, and people do not care about it.
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The Narrative of Violence in the Framework of the Post-Truth Concept in Television Series
Post-truth, chosen as the word of the year in 2016, is defined as the determination of public opinion by personal feelings and beliefs rather than objective facts. Most of the academic studies are on the negativity of populist discourse overcoming “reality” and thus finding more supporters of the irrational than the rational.
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Spin Doctor in the Post-Truth Era: “Our Brand Is Crisis” Movie Example
It is used to describe an era in which the importance of truth is lost.
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Disinformation, Post-Truth, and Naive Realism in COVID-19: Melting the Truth
Is an adjective defined as 'relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.
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Understanding Online Falsehood From the Perspective of Social Problem
Post-truth refers to the circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping individuals’ opinion than appeals to their emotion and belief.
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Truth Trying to Survive: Reality Perception in Survivor Programs
The new reality of the online world appeals to the senses. A new space where emotions replace reality.
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Digital Communication in a GIF Culture: The Graphic Interchange Format as a Behavioral Crossroad of Contemporary Paradigms
Post-truth is a culture paradigm in which debate is framed largely by appeals to emotion disconnected from the details of policy, and by the repeated assertion of talking points to which factual rebuttals are ignored. Post-truth differs from traditional contesting and falsifying of facts by relegating facts and expert opinions to be of secondary importance relative to appeal to emotion. While this has been described as a contemporary problem, some observers have described it as a long-standing part of political life that was less notable before the advent of the Internet and related social changes.
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Erdogan vs. Erdogan: A Polarized Post-Truth Case in Social Media Reality
It includes a collective culture which is personal convictions and emotions are more efecctive than objective reality. Participants/partisans reproduce numerous truths by participating in political discourses.
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