Fr. 230.00

The Oxford Handbook of Lying

English · Hardback

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Description

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This handbook brings together past and current research on all aspects of lying and deception, with chapters contributed by leading international experts in the field. We are confronted daily with cases of lying, deception, bullshitting, and 'fake news', making it imperative to understand how lying works, how it can be defined, and whether it can be detected. A further important issue is whether lying should always be considered a bad thing or if, in some cases, it
is simply a useful instrument of human cognition. This volume is the first to offer a comprehensive and up-to-date exploration of these and other issues from the combined perspectives of linguistics, philosophy, and psychology. Chapters offer precise definitions of lying and its subtypes, and outline
the range of fields in which lying and deception play a role, from empirical lie detection and the acquisition of lying to its role in fiction, metaphor, and humour. They also describe the tools and approaches that are used by scholars researching lying and deception, such as questionnaire studies, EEG, neuroimaging, and the polygraph.

The volume will be an essential reference for students and researchers in a range of fields who are looking to deepen their understanding of all aspects of lying and deception, and will contribute to establishing the vibrant new field of interdisciplinary lying research.

List of contents










  • 1: Jörg Meibauer: Introduction: What is lying?

  • Part I: Traditions

  • 2: James Edwin Mahon: Classic philosophical approaches to lying and deception

  • 3: James Edwin Mahon: Contemporary approaches to the philosophy of lying

  • 4: Karol J. Hardin: Linguistic approaches to lying and deception

  • 5: Lewis Bott and Emma Williams: Psycholinguistic approaches to lying and deception

  • 6: Alexa Decker, Amanda Disney, Brianna D'Elia, and Julian Paul Keenan: Lying, deception, and the brain

  • Part II: Concepts

  • 7: Stephen Wright: Lying and truth

  • 8: Mark Jary: Lying and assertion

  • 9: Matthew Benton: Lying, belief, and knowledge

  • 10: Andreas Stokke: Lying, sincerity, and quality

  • 11: Swati Gupta and Andrew Ortony: Lying and deception

  • 12: Neri Marsili: Lying and certainty

  • 13: Don Fallis: Lying and omissions

  • 14: Jörg Meibauer: Lying, implicating, and presupposing

  • 15: Kathi Beier: Lying and self-deception

  • 16: Eliot Michaelson: Lying, testimony, and epistemic vigilance

  • Part III: Types of lies and deception

  • 17: Julia Staffel: Knowledge lies and group lies

  • 18: Jennifer Lackey: Selfless assertions

  • 19: Jörg Meibauer: Bald-faced lies

  • 20: Andreas Stokke: Bullshitting

  • 21: Jennifer Perillo: Bluffing

  • 22: Simone Dietz: White and prosocial lies

  • Part IV: Distinctions

  • 23: Emar Maier: Lying and fiction

  • 24: Matthew McGlone and Max Baryshevtsev: Lying and quotation

  • 25: Marta Dynel: Lying and humour

  • 26: Rachel Giora: Lying, irony, and default interpretation

  • 27: Paul Egré and Benjamin Icard: Lying and vagueness

  • 28: Claudia Claridge: Lying, metaphor, and hyperbole

  • 29: Marina Terkourafi: Lying and politeness

  • Part V: Domains

  • 30: Victoria Talwar: Development of lying and cognitive abilities

  • 31: Samantha Mann: Lying and lie detection

  • 32: Kees van Deemter and Ehud Reiter: Lying and computational linguistics

  • 33: Bella M. DePaulo: Lying in social psychology

  • 34: Matthias Gamer and Kristina Suchotzki: Lying and psychology

  • 35: Giorgio Ganis: Lying and neuroscience

  • 36: Thomas L. Carson: Lying and ethics

  • 37: Stuart P. Green: Lying and the law

  • 38: Marta Serra-Garcia: Lying in economy

  • 39: Anita E. Kelly: Lying and education

  • 40: Dariusz Galasi¿ski: Lying and discourse analysis

  • 41: Piers Robinson, David Miller, Eric Herring, and Vian Bakir: Lying and politics

  • 42: Thomas L. Carson: Lying and history

  • 43: Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer: Lying and the arts

  • 44: Fumiko Nishimura: Lying in different cultures



About the author

Jörg Meibauer is Professor of German Language and Linguistics at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. His research focuses on cognitive pragmatics, with an emphasis on the grammar-pragmatics interface. His many publications include Lying at the Semantics-Pragmatics Interface (De Gruyter Mouton 2014) and he is the editor of multiple volumes such as What is a Context? Linguistic Approaches and Challenges (with R. Finkbeiner and P. B. Schumacher; Benjamins 2012) and Pejoration (with R. Finkbeiner; Benjamins 2016).

Summary

This handbook brings together past and current research on all aspects of lying and deception, with chapters contributed by leading international experts in the field. We are confronted daily with cases of lying, deception, bullshitting, and 'fake news', making it imperative to understand how lying works, how it can be defined, and whether it can be detected. A further important issue is whether lying should always be considered a bad thing or if, in some cases, it is simply a useful instrument of human cognition. This volume is the first to offer a comprehensive and up-to-date exploration of these and other issues from the combined perspectives of linguistics, philosophy, and psychology. Chapters offer precise definitions of lying and its subtypes, and outline the range of fields in which lying and deception play a role, from empirical lie detection and the acquisition of lying to its role in fiction, metaphor, and humour. They also describe the tools and approaches that are used by scholars researching lying and deception, such as questionnaire studies, EEG, neuroimaging, and the polygraph.

The volume will be an essential reference for students and researchers in a range of fields who are looking to deepen their understanding of all aspects of lying and deception, and will contribute to establishing the vibrant new field of interdisciplinary lying research.

Additional text

All in all, this book includes passionate analyses for students and professors of linguistics, philosophy, psychology, media studies, cultural studies, etc., and presents a critical approach of the literature on lying... More importantly, seeing all these examples from different fields, we realize how ubiquitous lying and deceiving really are.

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