Immanuel Kant has categorically declared that all lies are unethical. — god must be atheist
... what would you say about the ethical value of lying? Is lying moral, immoral, and which is when, under what arrangement of malice / vindication for the teller and the listener? — god must be atheist
Nice OP! It leaves the question, is lying a one or a many? Is there something that all lies have in common in virtue of which they're lies, and lacking, they're not? Aristotle says approximately that a lie is when your mouth says other than what your mind knows (thinks, supposes, understands) to be the truth.There are different types of lies, — god must be atheist
180 Proof seems to be on this, but has it upside down. Let's suppose that Kant opposes the lie, unless it already is the good lie (the lie that is already good before it is said - assuming there can be such). 180 argues (it seems) that the lie that does no harm is OK. 180 seems to leave a middle ground that Kant does not leave, the lie that does no harm. — tim wood
Immanuel Kant has categorically declared that all lies are unethical.
He said that in an era of absolutism. It's either black or white, no shades of gray; it's either good, or evil, no shades of nuances. Either male of female, no shades of gender realization. Either mature or immature, no shades of the Autism spectrum.
That's why I thought of lies, lying, today. Have been thinking about it, for a while, actually. My girlfriend often tell me lies. But they are not upsetting. Despite my having come from a home where my mother had tried to instill only three life lessons into us, her children: don't lie, don't steal, don't engage in fights.
Well.
There are different types of lies, depending on the types of act it achieves for the teller and for the listener.
1. Malicious lie, to hurt the listener; to vindicate the teller.
2. Malicious lie, to hurt the listener, but leave the teller neutral.
3. Benign lie, to leave the listener unharmed, but to vindicate the teller.
4. Benign lie, to leave the listener unharmed, but to help the teller cut a long story shorter.
5. Benign lie, to make the listener be worried, and to make the teller happy, when the teller tells the listener that this was a lie, and, releived, the listener laughs with the teller.
Please note that 6. and 7. are missing: listener maltreated or left unharmed, and the teller maltreated. Nobody lies to harm their own causes.
Please note that 8. is missing: Benign lie, to leave the listener unharmed, but leave the teller neutral. Lying for lying's sake with no detectable difference in reaction between truth and lie is done only by pathological liars.
Sometimes there is an appearance of teller getting harmed; for instance, a kid kills a teacher, and the father confesses wrongly to the crime, and gets locked up or the chair. This seems like the father lied to harm himself; but for the father, it is less hurt to be locked up in penitentiary or get hanged than to see his son be locked up there or executed.
My girlfriend notoriously uses 3. if she is late for a date, and 4.
For those interested, they can create a table of sorts, with rows and columns, and add a third variable: a third party gets unharmed or malicious wronged by a lie, for all cases possible of the teller and the listener being unharmed or maliciously wronged.
If you were Immanuel Kant, and you were presented the above structure, what would you say about the ethical value of lying? Is lying moral, immoral, and which is when, under what arrangement of malice / vindication for the teller and the listener? — god must be atheist
Kant, from what I know, uses the categorical imperative to determine what's good or bad. The effects of an action are, well, inconsequential. There's "something" immoral about telling untruths whether they have bad or good consequences. — TheMadFool
So making art viz. truths via fictions is always "immoral" because it violates the CI prohibition on "telling untruths"? :chin: Does K ever really square this circle ... How can we square it using K's "inconsequentialist" deontology? — 180 Proof
My girlfriend notoriously uses 3. if she is late for a date, and 4. — god must be atheist
Deliberate misrepresentation of one's own thought and belief.
I think that that covers them all.
Anyone have an example to the contrary? — creativesoul
Deliberate misrepresentation of one's own thought and belief. — creativesoul
The effects of an action are, well, inconsequential. There's "something" immoral about telling untruths whether they have bad or good consequences. What that "something" is is probably unexplained but Kant had his categorical imperative rule which taps into the collective intuition on morality and never outputs an action that violates this intuition as permissible. — TheMadFool
When we say that man chooses himself, we do mean that every one of us must choose himself; but by that we also mean that in choosing for himself he chooses for all men. For in effect, of all the actions a man may take in order to create himself as he wills to be, there is not one which is not creative, at the same time, of an image of man such as he believes he ought to be. — Sartre
is a useless rule.You ought to act such that the rule you adopt could be the same rule for everyone. — Immanuel Kant
When we say that man chooses himself, we do mean that every one of us must choose himself; but by that we also mean that in choosing for himself he chooses for all men. For in effect, of all the actions a man may take in order to create himself as he wills to be, there is not one which is not creative, at the same time, of an image of man such as he believes he ought to be. — Sartre
I am sorry, but the passage in and by itself is nonsense. At least I see no sense in it. — god must be atheist
Man possesses a human nature; that “human nature,” which is the conception of human being, is found in every man; which means that each man is a particular example of a universal conception, the conception of Man. In Kant, this universality goes so far that the wild man of the woods, man in the state of nature and the bourgeois are all contained in the same definition and have the same fundamental qualities. Here again, the essence of man precedes that historic existence which we confront in experience.
Atheistic existentialism, of which I am a representative, declares with greater consistency that if God does not exist there is at least one being whose existence comes before its essence, a being which exists before it can be defined by any conception of it. That being is man or, as Heidegger has it, the human reality. What do we mean by saying that existence precedes essence? We mean that man first of all exists, encounters himself, surges up in the world – and defines himself afterwards. — Sartre
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant-moral/#CatHypImpIt is categorical in virtue of applying to us unconditionally, or simply because we possesses rational wills, without reference to any ends that we might or might not have. It does not, in other words, apply to us on the condition that we have antecedently adopted some goal for ourselves. — link
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