(October 21, 2013 at 9:50 am)Drich Wrote: Again you keep dancing, but you use of the word lie all hinges on intent. To call someone a liar you must show an intent to mis lead or to intentionally deceive. Can you do this? Yes or no.Drich stamping his feet, chucking a tantrum and blocking his ears. This is from my last post, " Whether you have intent or not only you can answer that if you have insight into your conscious and subconscious."
You have stated again that lie must have intent by saying "lie all hinges on intent". I have already shown you that it does not.
Definition of LIE
intransitive verb
1: to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive
2: to create a false or misleading impression
person A says 1 + 1 = 3.1234567890353535352243244
Can we say person A has lied? We can not know intent especially from a liar, so number 1 definition cannot be established. Lets look at number 2 definition. Did person A create something and is it false. Yes therefore person a has lied without intent being shown.
Notice how you avoided my question after I tried to answer yours in my last post.


