Here's a different view, from Thomas L. Carson, philosopher, and author of "Lying and Deception: Theory and Practice." (2010)Alexiev wrote: ↑Fri Jun 07, 2024 3:42 amLie: to make an untrue statement with the intent to deceive.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 07, 2024 2:57 am
What's absurd is to think that beliefs that differ from reality are not lies. What's really absurd is to allow lies about the very most important matters that exist.
a lie is a deliberate false statement that the speaker warrants to be true. Two features of this definition are noteworthy. First, contrary to most standard definitions, it argues that lying does not require that the liar intends to deceive others. (The chapter appeals to cases in which one is compelled or enticed to make false statements, cases of lying in which one can benefit by making false statements even if they do not deceive others, and cases of bald‐faced lies in which the liar knows that others know she is lying and therefore has no hope or intention of deceiving them.) Second, the chapter holds that in order to tell a lie, one must make a statement that one warrants to be true. According to the definition, any lie violates an implicit promise or guarantee that what one says is true. The definition makes sense of the common view that lying involves a breach of trust. To lie, on this view, is to invite others to trust and rely on what one says by warranting its truth, and at the same time to betray that trust by making a false statement that one does not believe to be true.
So it seems you're not quoting a universally-accepted definition. And like Carson, I think the important aspect of a lie is its departure from truth. The intention of the liar is a secondary matter, and not necessary to the thing, in itself, being a lie.
Here, we separate between liar and lie. Becoming a liar requires intent: but telling or spreading a lie does not. The former is a character judgment; the latter is a statement of fact.
So if I tell you that you take the train to Washington to get to Brighton, even if I believe I'm telling you the truth, you are going to end up in Washington. And you will have been deceived, regardless of my intention. The thing you have believed turned out to be a lie: that it fooled both of us doesn't make it less a lie.