Materialism in the Non-Material World

October 29, 2009
MATERIALISM IN THE NONMATERIAL WORLD
===================================
How many customers have you served at your café on Facebook, and how
many friends have gifted you fertilizer or plants on FarmVille? The
growing movement of social activity in the virtual world includes a
great deal of very real economic activity, report researchers at the
Helsinki Institute for Information Technology.
While many futurists believe that the growth of virtual worlds would
encourage movement away from consumption, materialism is apparently
trumping nonmaterialism. As people spend more time online socializing,
they are also spending real money, such as making micropurchases of
heart or balloon icons to favor their friends, family, or celebrity
idols.
The reason is simple: Humans behave as humans whether it is in the
corporeal world or online, notes infotech researcher Vili Lehdonvirta.
What we buy proclaims our identity and denotes our status, and we want
to have status online just as we do in real life.
The advantage that consumption may have in the nonmaterial world is
that it permits economic activity with reduced environmental impacts,
says Lehdonvirta.
SOURCE: Helsinki Institute for Information Technology
http://www.hiit.fi/node/1028

How many customers have you served at your café on Facebook, and how many friends have gifted you fertilizer or plants on FarmVille? The growing movement of social activity in the virtual world includes a great deal of very real economic activity, report researchers at the Helsinki Institute for Information Technology.

While many futurists believe that the growth of virtual worlds would encourage movement away from consumption, materialism is apparently trumping nonmaterialism. As people spend more time online socializing, they are also spending real money, such as making micropurchases of heart or balloon icons to favor their friends, family, or celebrity idols.

The reason is simple: Humans behave as humans whether it is in the corporeal world or online, notes infotech researcher Vili Lehdonvirta. What we buy proclaims our identity and denotes our status, and we want to have status online just as we do in real life.

The advantage that consumption may have in the nonmaterial world is that it permits economic activity with reduced environmental impacts, says Lehdonvirta.

SOURCE: Helsinki Institute for Information Technology

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2 Responses to Materialism in the Non-Material World

  1. uberVU - social comments on October 29, 2009 at 13:56

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