Shouldn't he judge that the liar who intents to save his friend as moral, and the truth teller who intents to kill his friend as immoral? — Happiness
Shouldn't he judge that the liar who intents to save his friend as moral, and the truth teller who intents to kill his friend as immoral? — Happiness
Lies cannot be universalised because if they were they would not work. Lies only work in an environment of honesty and trust. If everyone lied about X no one would be trusted about X and then no one would be given the chance to get away with X. Lies only work because people believe promises, undermine that and lies don't work anymore (and we would be living in a far worse place). — Jamesk
Well, they can't work when everyone always lies, because then it's the same as telling the truth. People would just assume that anything anyone says is a lie. — Terrapin Station
As long as some people tell the truth sometimes, lying would work. — Terrapin Station
↪Tim3003
One acts based on results only in teleological ethics, not in deontic ethics.
Kant's maxim isn't bereft of consequential thinking because, although lying is proscribed, preventing the murderer from entering your domain isn't. You may defend yourself, and your own. This is anticipatory in nature, thus giving regard to possibilities, i.e., consequences. — gloaming
I don't understand this response.That is not the point, — Jamesk
In my view though, and I think that Kant would probably agree with me, is that I would not open my front door to a person with bad intentions towards me or my household, so I would not open the door and I would call the police. Isn't that what most sensible people would do? — Jamesk
Of course, but I think it's normally assumed that those (evasive) options are not available and your only options are to say nothing, tell the truth or lie. — ChrisH
I'm struggling to make sense of this. What you say here implies that you may lie if you do have other options! I'm sure this wasn't what you intended.Not by Kant, he is very specific that only when you have no other option than answering yes or no that you must not lie. — Jamesk
All I'm asking is if X has no 'moral worth' but it is the right thing to do, in what sense is X right? — ChrisH
Even if I accepted the logical force of Kant's argument, it would have little effect on my practical reasoning. I would still lie, and accept that I was thereby doing something unethical in order to save my friend or loved one. Even if I accepted a similar maxim such as "stealing is always wrong," it wouldn't stop me from, for instance, stealing bread to save a starving family.Suppose a murderer is at your door and asks you where your friend is. Your friend is hiding in your house, but the murderer is going to kill him. Should you tell the truth?
Kant argues that you should tell the truth because the maxim of lying can't be universalized. — Happiness
Lying is always an immoral act — Rank Amateur
To define it first:
A lie communicates some information
The liar intends to deceive or mislead
The liar believes that what they are 'saying' is not true
Lying is bad – immoral because –
If diminishes truth in the world – and therefor diminishes trust
If one believes truth and trust are good – things that diminish them are bad
The liar is treating those lied to as a means to an end
Lying makes it harder for those lied to to make an informed decision
Lying corrupts the liar - (a gateway moral wrong to other moral wrongs) — Rank Amateur
Even if we go with all of that, how would a lie like "Pleased to meet you" (when the person doesn't actually feel like being social at all at the moment) diminish trust or make it harder to make an informed decision? — Terrapin Station
how does is add to trust of make informed decisions easier ? — Rank Amateur
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