V
Verbum_Caro
Guest
- Lying is not always wrong
I find this difficult to accept. Most likely you have run across the argument in your research that lying is a statement (or representation) at variance with the mind. As such it would seem a direct offense against the virtue of truthfulness. When uttered (or otherwise represented) it seems to do violence to the very nature of language (or communication) which is ordered to conveying the truth. For that reason I would follow Augustine and Aquinas, and what I have taken to be the common moral teaching that lying is always wrong. - If lying is always wrong, then when faced with two sins, choose the lesser
But, again, if lying is always a sin, then choosing it is not option regardless of the effects it would have.
I think the most fruitful area to discover some sort of solution is along the lines of “mental reservation”. Another possible approach is some sort of theory analogous to “assumption of the risk” whereby the unjust and violent questioner should know that by the circumstance of his questioning that equivocation is expected. In this sense a statement which is made that has equivocal meaning or includes some mental reservation would not be strictly at variance with the mind. For instance in certain situations all parties involved know that language (or representations) are not strict representations of one’s mind. Players in a play and audience members would be one example.
What are your thoughts?
VC