Frank Merton
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2010
- Messages
- 310
Animals, ourselves included, are equipped with survival instincts: this is a consequence of natural processes since gene lines that do not have such instincts do not persist. I do not see where that has anything to do with when lying might be justified..
I see this lack of desire for an early death out in the wild, also.
All animals will flee a situation where their life is possibly threatened, without being aware they are alive.. just not wanting the alternative.
I am perhaps after a more philosophical question -- what justifications, if any, are available for lies (deliberate attempts to mislead)? Stated from the opposite angle -- what, if anything, is there about such lies that makes them consistently wrong (or consistently unjustified).
My view is simply that I "know" lies are unjustified and wrong, but I cannot produce a satisfactory rational argument to show it, nor can I produce a similarly satisfactory rational argument that might show that there are justified lies. This leave me wanting help.
I added the parenthesis to the above of, "deliberate attempts to mislead" to try to avoid the red herring some posters have played games with -- of things that are formally untrue but are not really lies, as there is no effort to mislead -- things like hyperbole, metaphor, and of course puns.
