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Restoring Phronesis and practice: marketing’s forgotten P’s

Donncha Kavanagh (UCD School of Business, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.)

Journal of Historical Research in Marketing

ISSN: 1755-750X

Article publication date: 18 August 2014

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the evolution of marketing’s philosophical conversation over the past 120 years, focusing on the emergent meaning of the notion that marketing should become more “scientific”.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper focuses on the US academic marketing literature, primarily journal articles and books published in the first half of the 20th century.

Findings

The Aristotelian distinction between techné, epistemé and phronesis provides a rich basis for framing philosophical discussion in marketing, and should supplant the art-science debate and Anderson’s distinction between science1 and science2. Prior to 1959, the marketing journals provided a forum for phronesis, though this diminished as the academic marketing community largely abandoned the inductive, contextual approach in favour of a deductive, “scientific” methodology. The Ford Foundation played an important role in effecting this change.

Practical implications

The paper highlights the importance of forums where practitioners can reflect on the ethical and social implications of their practices and then work to enhance these practices for the greater social good.

Social implications

Questions the value of distinctions between marketing theorists and practitioners and the consequential focus of marketing journals.

Originality/value

Advances the concept of phronesis in the marketing literature and distinguishes it from epistemé, which has dominated academic marketing discourse over the past 60 years.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author thanks Andy Prothero and John Desmond for their helpful suggestions and advice. He also sincerely thanks Mark Tadajewski and DG Brian Jones for their quite excellent editorial work, help and kind words of encouragement.

Citation

Kavanagh, D. (2014), "Restoring Phronesis and practice: marketing’s forgotten P’s", Journal of Historical Research in Marketing, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 331-350. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHRM-02-2014-0006

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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