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Expressive Lies

Time: Wed 2023-04-19 13.00 - 14.45

Location: Room 217, Division of History, Teknikringen 72, 5th floor

Participating: Luise Mirow (Umeå University)

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Most of the recent discussions about lying have focused either on which speech act is required for lying or on whether lying requires an intention to deceive.1 These discussions overlook a number of philosophically interesting questions about the kinds of contents that can figure in definitions of lying.2 I will address one of these questions by showing how recent definitions of lying characterise content in a way that requires lies to have propositional content. Having done that, I turn my attention to showing how a broader understanding of content can secure most of what we wanted from the classic characterisations of lying. My main aims in this paper are thus to raise a problem for recent definitions of lying and develop an alternative definition of lying.
According to recent definitions of lying, asserting a propositional content is a necessary condition for lying. Such definitions of lying are problematic in view of examples like the following three cases that intuitively seem to be instances of lying.