A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?

The traditional definition of lying has been challenged by contemporary philosophers who have raised multiple counterexamples in recent years. At the forefront of these counterexamples are bald-faced lies, selfless assertions, and misleading - all phenomena that fulfill the conditions of the traditi...

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Main Authors: Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S., Ignacio, Rizzaine S., Dacela, Mark Anthony L
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Published: Animo Repository 2022
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/sinaya/vol1/iss3/1
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/sinaya/article/1047/viewcontent/1_Humanities_Arts_Education_Manuscript_1.pdf
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:sinaya-10472023-11-08T06:07:13Z A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive? Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S. Ignacio, Rizzaine S. Dacela, Mark Anthony L The traditional definition of lying has been challenged by contemporary philosophers who have raised multiple counterexamples in recent years. At the forefront of these counterexamples are bald-faced lies, selfless assertions, and misleading - all phenomena that fulfill the conditions of the traditional definition of lying yet are not considered conventional lies. The emergence of these cases has prompted philosophers to ask the question, “Is the intent to deceive a necessary condition for lying?” There are generally two philosophical stances concerning the topic: the deceptionists, who believe that the intent to deceive is a necessary condition for lying, and non-deceptionists, who believe that the intent to deceive is an unnecessary condition for lying. This paper will explore the deceptionist account of Jennifer Lackey, who claims that the separation of the intent to deceive from lying is an unhappy divorce, and Don Fallis’ non-deceptionist reply to Lackey. Fallis argues that this separation is not so unhappy of a divorce and claims that lying need not appeal to deception. This paper will argue that Fallis is mistaken in his claim, providing counterexamples that his account fails to capture as lies. Furthermore, this suggests that Fallis has misrepresented Lackey’s argument. 2022-12-31T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/sinaya/vol1/iss3/1 info:doi/10.59588/3027-9283.1047 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/sinaya/article/1047/viewcontent/1_Humanities_Arts_Education_Manuscript_1.pdf Sinaya: A Philippine Journal for Senior High School Teachers and Students Animo Repository lying; deception; selfless assertions; Jennifer Lackey; Don Fallis Arts and Humanities
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic lying; deception; selfless assertions; Jennifer Lackey; Don Fallis
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle lying; deception; selfless assertions; Jennifer Lackey; Don Fallis
Arts and Humanities
Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S.
Ignacio, Rizzaine S.
Dacela, Mark Anthony L
A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
description The traditional definition of lying has been challenged by contemporary philosophers who have raised multiple counterexamples in recent years. At the forefront of these counterexamples are bald-faced lies, selfless assertions, and misleading - all phenomena that fulfill the conditions of the traditional definition of lying yet are not considered conventional lies. The emergence of these cases has prompted philosophers to ask the question, “Is the intent to deceive a necessary condition for lying?” There are generally two philosophical stances concerning the topic: the deceptionists, who believe that the intent to deceive is a necessary condition for lying, and non-deceptionists, who believe that the intent to deceive is an unnecessary condition for lying. This paper will explore the deceptionist account of Jennifer Lackey, who claims that the separation of the intent to deceive from lying is an unhappy divorce, and Don Fallis’ non-deceptionist reply to Lackey. Fallis argues that this separation is not so unhappy of a divorce and claims that lying need not appeal to deception. This paper will argue that Fallis is mistaken in his claim, providing counterexamples that his account fails to capture as lies. Furthermore, this suggests that Fallis has misrepresented Lackey’s argument.
format text
author Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S.
Ignacio, Rizzaine S.
Dacela, Mark Anthony L
author_facet Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S.
Ignacio, Rizzaine S.
Dacela, Mark Anthony L
author_sort Bagalay Jr., Bernardo S.
title A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
title_short A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
title_full A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
title_fullStr A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
title_full_unstemmed A Response To Fallis: Does Lying Require the Intent to Deceive?
title_sort response to fallis: does lying require the intent to deceive?
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2022
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/sinaya/vol1/iss3/1
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/sinaya/article/1047/viewcontent/1_Humanities_Arts_Education_Manuscript_1.pdf
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