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vol.119 issue2The project / prospects of "redeeming sin?": Some core insights and several unresolved problemsLand dispossession as "original sin". Can christian original sin talk be used as diagnostic tool within the public domain? author indexsubject indexarticles search
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Scriptura

On-line version ISSN 2305-445X
Print version ISSN 0254-1807

Abstract

DEANE-DRUMMOND, Celia. Deception in the language game. Tracing the natural roots of the vice of lying. Scriptura [online]. 2020, vol.119, n.2, pp.1-11. ISSN 2305-445X.  http://dx.doi.org/10.7833/119-2-1688.

In the public political sphere truth telling is becoming more the exception than the rule. Of all the tendencies to sin, lying is arguably one of the most destructive and most distinctive of human societies. Or is it? Is it, for example, right to exaggerate the importance of keystone species in order to enhance public support for biodiversity conservation? Longstanding philosophical debates exist about the moral legitimacy of lying in certain circumstances where not to do so would lead to harmful social outcomes. What might be the evolutionary roots of tendencies to deceive and how might this map onto human capacities for lying? Is an Augustinian approach to lying as always fundamentally wrong too rigid an approach or is it essential to Christian witness in a world where truth telling is habitually compromised? This paper will explore the fuzzy boundaries between natural and social evils and tease out in a preliminary way their relationships with original sin.

Keywords : deception; truth; lying; language; morality; natural evil; original sin.

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