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Necessary Lies

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Necessary Lies

RSA,

5 min read
5 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

“Liar, liar, pants on fire” is an insult you could fling at anyone in any room – including yourself.

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Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

In some cases, only the most socially inept will reach for honesty when a lie will do. People lie to spare another’s feelings or to make themselves appear smarter. Sometimes, they fib for no good reason at all. In this video, commentator Ian Leslie speaks about why people lie. If you believe that no good can come of telling tall tales, you may be surprised at the reams of evidence to the contrary. The subject matter, although interesting, is at times tough to follow because of Leslie’s fast speaking style. Nonetheless, this is a curious field of study, and getAbstract suggests that anyone interested in the nuances of human behavior give it a look.

Summary

Few people would admit to being proponents of lying, yet it’s an ingrained part of human behavior. People lie about how they are feeling, whether they enjoyed a meal and what they did at the weekend, for example. In fact, studies show that people lie once or twice daily, and that strangers will fib three times in the first 10 minutes of meeting each other. Humans tend to justify their own behavior by classifying their falsities as “white lies.” Yet they’re not as kind with the falsehoods that others invent. Moreover, people expect higher standards from public figures and...

About the Speaker

Ian Leslie is an author and blogger about politics and psychology.


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