The Co-constitution of Bad Religion and Unethical Sales: Fear at the Heart of Japan's "Spiritual Sales"

Legal decisions surrounding activities associated with beliefs often described as "religious" usually conflate with laws and regulations that delineate other aspects of the context in which such activities occur. For example, transactions with psychics or fortune tellers usually need to ab...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:"Business Spirits: Religion and Business as Co-constitutive Phenomena"
Main Author: Gaitanidis, Ioannis (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: 2024
In: Implicit religion
Year: 2022, Volume: 25, Issue: 3/4, Pages: 337-353
Further subjects:B Spirituality
B consumer law
B Japan
B Psychics
B spiritual sales
B Religion in Contemporary Japan
B Fraud
B Religion and Law
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Description
Summary:Legal decisions surrounding activities associated with beliefs often described as "religious" usually conflate with laws and regulations that delineate other aspects of the context in which such activities occur. For example, transactions with psychics or fortune tellers usually need to abide by general consumer protection laws. In this article, I argue that controversies surrounding frauds and other troubles occurring during such transactions point to the equation "bad religion-unethical sales." To explain my argument, I first compare the rise of "spiritual sales" as a legal category in Japan in the last 35 years, to British regulations of mediumship. I then proceed to locate the emotion of "fear" at the centre of debates about the appropriateness of these laws for consumer protection. I end up concluding that "spiritual sales" are yet another example in which, today, the consumer's negative feelings have become the basis for claims of illegality, in contrast to how positive feelings are proof of sincerity and transparency.
ISSN:1743-1697
Contains:Enthalten in: Implicit religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/imre.27205