gordontd, on 2014-November-18, 09:01, said:
Which of these four words says that there has to be an intent to deceive? It says that the statement is false, and it says it is intentionally false (i.e. not a mistake). It does not say -in any way- with what intent the intentionally false statement is made.
When someone asks you how you are doing, do you than answer "fine, thank you" even if you are doing horrible? Is that a lie? Yes. Is the intent to deceive? No. The intent is to follow a social convention.
Christmas eve: You get an awful sweater.
You: "Thank you!"
-"Do you like it?"
You: "Oh yes!"
Is that a lie? Yes. Is the intent to deceive? No. The intent is to spare somebody's feelings.
Other famous example: Two colleagues had together authored a patent filed by their company. The patent was challenged in court by a competitor. In court, the judge asks one of the inventors how he came up with the idea. The answer: "Well, I had this problem and it was really bothering me. So, in bed my wife asked me what my problem was. I sketched the problem for my wife and I told her that I couldn't find the solution. Then my wife suggested that I should look at it from the other side because then it would be much easier to understand. And she was right." End of Patent.
Was it a lie to put these two authors as the inventors on the patent? Yes. Was there any intent to deceive? Certainly not. (The inventor and his wife would together have made more money if they would have included the wife.) They probably never thought of putting the wife on the patent, since she was not a professional in the field.
I think that you can come up with more examples of lies, without intent to deceive.
Rik