Random question:
Jan. 10th, 2013 07:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
If you randomly make something up to settle an argument or to get your way, and by sheer chance you happen to be correct, does it still constitute lying?
Like, consider all those signs swearing that the only reason you cannot wear shoes in this store is because of the big mean health department. The health department doesn't actually care, and the store owners don't have any clue whether it cares or not, they just want a way to back up what is really an arbitrary dress code. (Which is fine, they can have as many rules as they like in their own establishment.) But what if, by coincidence, they happened to be in the one tiny municipality that happened to have that rule? Even though they really ought to have known that they didn't know the law, is it still a lie if it's accidentally true?
Like, consider all those signs swearing that the only reason you cannot wear shoes in this store is because of the big mean health department. The health department doesn't actually care, and the store owners don't have any clue whether it cares or not, they just want a way to back up what is really an arbitrary dress code. (Which is fine, they can have as many rules as they like in their own establishment.) But what if, by coincidence, they happened to be in the one tiny municipality that happened to have that rule? Even though they really ought to have known that they didn't know the law, is it still a lie if it's accidentally true?
no subject
Date: 2013-01-13 06:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-01-13 03:41 pm (UTC)The museum I used to work with has - as part of their exhibition - a children's museum which focuses on different rites of passage for children and teenagers. Among many other things, there is a mask from Sierra Leone, worn by girls initiated into a specific secret society. When you ask the museum why they're using this mask, from this country, to represent African traditional secret societies in general, they will say something along the lines of "It neatly illustrates some typical features of these masked societies, but it is also different from the norm in that this is one of the rare women's societies, most of them are for men. So it's both typical and atypical, all in one object."
If you ask the same question behind the scenes, the answer will be "Because we happened to have this mask from Sierra Leone lying around in the cellar."
Factually, the statement about the mask being both typical and atypical is true. But as they only made that up because you can hardly write "We used this one so we didn't have to buy or borrow something new" in the catalogue, it's still a lie, or at the very least, an excuse.
[/long random story]
no subject
Date: 2013-01-17 04:49 am (UTC)