Something wouldn't have to add to trust in order for it to not diminish trust. It can simply be neutral. — Terrapin Station
Lying is always an immoral act
Not doing what is in your power to do to prevent harm to others is immoral — Rank Amateur
This is not what Kant is saying. He is saying that lying can never be moral for any reason, not that it is always immoral to lie. He does not directly prescribe lying as immoral. — Jamesk
I think it's recommendable to lie- -it would be morally worse to tell the truth--is when your wife asks you, "Do I look fat in this?" and you think she does--and basically you'd think she looks fat in anything, but you know that if you say she looks fat in it, it will affect her negatively--so you answer "No." — Terrapin Station
.At least in my amateur mind - i am not sure I understand the distinction — Rank Amateur
It is a hard one to get and I suppose you don't have to accept it either. Kant is saying (in my opinion) that making a lying promise (one you know that you won't keep) can never be moral for any reason. He doesn't say that it is immoral, only that it cannot be moral. I am not sure that Kant implies that not acting morally equates to acting immorally, but I might be wrong.
If I borrowed a sum of money from you to buy life saving medicine for my child, knowing that I couldn't repay you, would you consider the act to have been immoral? The act was definitely wrong but I am not sure that Kant would have seen it as immoral. — Jamesk
I not only think that some lies are permissible, in some cases I think it's much better to lie than to be honest. — Terrapin Station
In the case of the money, I am back to my point. Giving the benefit of the doubt to situation that no other alternative existed, than the father is facing a moral dilemma and is forced to chose the lesser of evils. Not sure that is any more or less semantic than ends justifying means. But to me, at least it is an important distinction. — Rank Amateur
And my argument back would be that in many of these cases the real objective of the lie is for the benefit of the liar and not the one lied to. — Rank Amateur
If we all agree that it is preferable to lie about somethings, sometimes then those type of lies become a universal law. It works when we all do it, not just when one or a few of us do it. — Jamesk
Yes the lie was and immoral act. The fact that some amount of money is the reason the child can not be cured is an immoral act. Faced with these two evils - the father chose the lesser of immoral acts. — Rank Amateur
I don't think situations are the kinds of things that can be 'immoral'.It is an immoral situation that forces me to make a pragmatic choice of evils. — Rank Amateur
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
There is such a thing as a just war, but not a moral one. — Rank Amateur
This is correct. Kantian moral philosophy stipulates that a moral act is predicated solely on the premise that a person must always act according to determinations he himself deems fit. In the case at hand, lying to the murderer at the door is completely excused by the determination that any loss of human life, is his moral duty to, if not to prevent, then at least to obstruct. Which leads inexorably to the concept of an autonomous free will. — Mww
Is telling the killer the lie, or opening the door and shooting him in the knee equally moral actions because they share an equal motivation. — Rank Amateur
I hold to the traditional absolute morality argument that we humans make poor judgments left to our own prejudices on what is or is not moral. — Rank Amateur
Care to elaborate on your version of how it is we humans make poor judgements? Not examples, mind you; I’ve got more than a few years experience in that, thank you very much. — Mww
Kant argues that you should tell the truth because the maxim of lying can't be universalized. A lie is always wrong regardless of the circumstances, your intention (even if it is a good one) and the person to whom you lie. We should not create even a single exception to this rule, Kant argues, as it would make all moral duties uncertain and useless. — Happiness
When there is conflict between what we desire and some moral belief we feel, we can often find a creative way to rationalize the moral belief away, to get what we desire. — Rank Amateur
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