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When lying saves a life or prevents harm ... oh, yeah.When, if ever, is lying morally permissible -- and/or the skillful thing to do? Do you, like Sam Harris, believe lying is always wrong? Or do you take a more flexible view and believe that it is sometimes the right or the best thing to do?
When lying saves a life or prevents harm ... oh, yeah.
Like technomage said, to save lives.
When, if ever, is lying morally permissible -- and/or the skillful thing to do? Do you, like Sam Harris, believe lying is always wrong? Or do you take a more flexible view and believe that it is sometimes the right or the best thing to do?
What about to gain advantage over one's enemies, such as during a war?
When, if ever, is lying morally permissible -- and/or the skillful thing to do? Do you, like Sam Harris, believe lying is always wrong? Or do you take a more flexible view and believe that it is sometimes the right or the best thing to do?
What about to gain advantage over one's enemies, such as during a war?
When, if ever, is lying morally permissible -- and/or the skillful thing to do? Do you, like Sam Harris, believe lying is always wrong? Or do you take a more flexible view and believe that it is sometimes the right or the best thing to do?
When lying achieves justice, it is proper.
This is especially true when avoiding a loss due to coercion.
Do these pants make my butt look big?
Lying is often the only solution when the truth is unwanted.
As Mes wrote, "Do these pants make me look fat?"
It could be perilous to tell the truth.
Likewise, when German soldiers went house to house asking if any Jews were present the only recourse was to lie. Truth is so over-rated.
What about to gain advantage over one's enemies, such as during a war?
Lying, in and of itself, is morally neutral.
Any system which paints dishonesty as inherently immoral completely ignores the fact that lying is a fundamental component of human communication and is necessary for social interaction to work effectively.
We lie all the time, actively, unknowingly, through omission, and through body language for a whole host of reasons. As with anything, morality is a matter of the intention and results of lying. Lying is simply a tool, and it can be immoral, moral, or amoral. Social and cultural traditions which define lying as necessarily immoral only confuse and guilt people, as no action is inherently immoral unless it always results in harm to another. It's all about intentions with lying. The most skillful lliars I've known are among the most moral people I've known and the most immoral people I've known. And, in both cases, among the most intelligent people I've known.
Additionally, I think to be a good liar, for good or bad, one has to be very empathetic. In essence, being able to convincingly lie because you believe it and communicate it in a believable way to who you are lying to. At least that's my take as an excellent liar.
You're preventing harm to yourself/your side, yes?What about to gain advantage over one's enemies, such as during a war?