Ikhwansyah Nasution
Universitas Islam Negeri Sumatra Utara

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Hyperreality and the Epistemological Crisis of Contemporary Communication: A Philosophical Review of the Ethical Philosophy of the Islamic Broadcasting Ecosystem in the Post-Truth Era Ikhwansyah Nasution; Rubino; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.515

Abstract

The ontological and epistemological transformations which occurred in the digital media ecosystem have created a communication disruption which reduces objective truth to a hyperreality commodity through its philosophical assessment. The study seeks to dismantle post-truth communication ethics problems while building an Islamic broadcasting system according to ethical principles. The study employs library research methods to examine philosophical texts and communication ethics using a philosophical hermeneutic methodology. Current digital communication systems operate as simulacra because users cannot distinguish between actual existence and virtual creation which leads to an ethical void that follows algorithmic patterns and constant online connections. Islamic broadcasting which depends on the values of liberation and truth (al-haqq) encounters major difficulties when prophetic messages transform into public entertainment. The study presents a new framework for communication ethics which combines tabayyun epistemological knowledge with discourse ethics to counteract common information practices. Islamic communication ethics serve two purposes established through their role as moral behavior guidelines and their function as a system which helps individuals restore their dignity when they experience technological disconnection
Regulating the Algorithmic Panopticon: A Critical Library Research on Islamic Communication Policy and Digital Media Ethics in the Era of Hyperconnectivity Ikhwansyah Nasution; Hasan Sazali; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.518

Abstract

This study examines the ethical and regulatory challenges of hyperconnected digital media by integrating critical media theory with Islamic communication ethics. Using a critical textual-library methodology, the research analyzes scholarly literature, regulatory documents, digital policy texts, and Islamic normative sources related to algorithmic governance, post-truth communication, and public accountability. The findings show that traditional broadcasting regulation is increasingly inadequate because digital communication is now shaped by global platforms, OTT services, recommender systems, and algorithmic visibility. The study also finds that hyperreality and post-truth dynamics intensify ethical crises by allowing emotionally charged, divisive, and misleading content to gain influence through engagement-based amplification. In response, this article argues that Islamic principles such as tabayyun, qaulan sadida, amanah, and maslahah can provide a normative foundation for digital policy. The study proposes an ethical co-regulation model based on state oversight, civil society participation, platform transparency, algorithmic auditing, and freedom-of-expression safeguards to protect the digital public sphere. Its main contribution is a hybrid regulatory framework that links technological accountability with moral-spiritual responsibility in Islamic broadcasting
Simulacra of Pity and The Death of Epistemic Authority: A Literature Review of The Philosophical Islamic Communication Regarding The Hyperreality of Preaching In The Post-Truth Era Ikhwansyah Nasution; Hasan Sazali; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This study examines how digital hyperreality and post-truth culture reshape Islamic communication and broadcasting in contemporary cyberspace. It argues that digital da’wah is no longer only a shift from physical pulpits to online platforms, but a structural transformation of religious meaning, authority, and public reasoning. Using a qualitative library-based design, the research analyzes recent scholarly works on digital da’wah, religious influencers, epistemic authority, Islamic communication ethics, platform governance, and communication regulation. The study applies qualitative content analysis and critical discourse interpretation to identify how algorithmic visibility, audience engagement, symbolic performance, and misinformation influence Islamic messages in digital public spaces. The findings show that digital da’wah may expand access to religious knowledge, yet it also risks commodifying piety, weakening scholarly authority, and reducing complex Islamic teachings into emotional and fragmented content. To address this crisis, Islamic communication philosophy offers ethical principles such as qaulan sadida, qaulan baligha, tabayyun, and amanah as foundations for truthful and responsible communication. The study proposes that future Islamic communication policy must combine digital literacy, epistemic accountability, algorithmic transparency, and ethical co-regulation to protect truth, dignity, public trust, and religious authority in the post-truth era. It strengthens Islamic broadcasting studies by linking ethics, regulation, and platform accountability.
The Dynamics of Communication Networks of Islamic Preaching Organizations in the New Media Era: A Review of the Phenomenon of Digital Preaching Trendsetters Ikhwansyah Nasution; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Anang Anas Azhar; Elfi Yanti Ritonga; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.525

Abstract

The digital era has created a completely different way for religious messages to be distributed which has transformed the operation of da’wah authority. The system evolved from traditional institutional frameworks to contemporary virtual networks which individual users created. This research investigates how digital da’wah trendsetters use organizational communication network theory to study their activities within new media environments. Through a literature review this study wants to reconceptualize the structure of da’wah organizations that are no longer held back by institutional walls which is a boundaryless organization but instead are controlled by algorithms and the node centrality of a trendsetter. The conceptual findings show that trendsetters on social media like YouTube and Instagram and TikTok actually function as Top Management in a virtual organization! The followers in this arrangement function as subordinates who willingly choose to reproduce and distribute and validate the da’wah messages. This dynamic creates a flow of information that is just massive and it is vulnerable to algorithmic bias and the fragmentation of religious authority. This article provides a conceptual synthesis that positions da’wah social media accounts as more than just media channels. The social media accounts function as an organizational communication ecosystem which has its own organizational structure that operates through hidden power dynamics and organizational culture.