The Ethics of Authenticity
Read the essay about being authentic and answer the questions.
The Ethics of Authenticity
In the age of the personal brand, the pursuit of authenticity has become a mandatory performance. We are told to be ourselves, yet this self-expression is often meticulously curated for public consumption. There is an inherent contradiction in the idea of planned authenticity; once a moment of vulnerability is framed, filtered, and uploaded, it ceases to be an organic experience and becomes a commodity. This leads to a state of hyper-reality, where the digital representation of our lives becomes more significant – and more scrutinised – than the lives themselves.
This preoccupation with being seen to be authentic can lead to a hollowed-out sense of self. When we begin to view our experiences through the lens of how they will perform online, we stop experiencing them directly. The sunset is no longer a moment of beauty, but a content opportunity. This shift suggests that we are moving away from a culture of being toward a culture of appearing. To reclaim a genuine sense of self, we must learn to value the moments that remain unrecorded, invisible to the algorithm, and known only to ourselves.