Choice from Deception

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An Choice from Deception is an unforced personal choice where a deceived agent chooses to believe a deceptive argument (produced by a deceiver performing an deception attempt).



References

2024

  • Claude 3
    • A Choice from Deception is an unforced personal choice where a deceived agent chooses to believe a deceptive argument put forth by a deceiver engaging in a deception attempt. In essence, it is a choice made based on false or misleading information, whether due to deception by others or self-deception.
    • At the interpersonal level, a Choice from Deception can occur in various contexts such as negotiations, legal proceedings, or insurance claims, where one party knowingly presents false or misleading arguments to sway the other party's beliefs and choices in a self-serving direction.
    • Intrapersonally, self-deception can lead to Choices from Deception, as when individuals erroneously attribute their capabilities or limitations to innate traits (e.g. "I can't do public speaking because I'm an introvert").
    • Psychologically, various cognitive biases and motivated reasoning processes make people vulnerable to deceptive arguments. These include confirmation bias (seeking information that confirms one's existing beliefs), illusory truth effects (believing false information that is repeated frequently), and motivated skepticism (excessively scrutinizing information that challenges one's beliefs). Emotions can also override rational evaluation of information.
    • When Choices from Deception become widespread in a society, the impacts can be severe. In politics, deceptive campaign rhetoric can sway electoral outcomes. In media, the spread of misinformation can distort public opinion. In markets, deceptive advertising can lead to misinformed consumer choices. The cumulative effects can undermine truth, trust, and effective decision-making in a society.
    • To avoid Choices from Deception, individuals can cultivate critical thinking skills, fact-check claims before accepting them, and strive to be intellectually humble and open to changing one's mind based on evidence. They can also be mindful of their own biases and practice empathizing with other perspectives. At a societal level, promoting media literacy, penalizing deliberate misinformation, and redesigning online platforms to limit the spread of false content may help.
    • Choices from Deception are related to a variety of other concepts such as bad faith argumentation (making arguments one knows to be false), bullshit (indifference to the truth), and dark patterns (design features that manipulate user choices). However, unlike bullshit, Choices from Deception involve some level of belief in the deceptive argument, and unlike dark patterns, they are not necessarily the result of intentional manipulation. Ultimately, Choices from Deception represent a failure of truth-seeking and authentic reasoning, whether in one's own mind or in dialogue with others.
    • **See also:** Negotiation, Insurance Bad Faith, Duplicity, Fraud, Act of Faith, Half-Truths, Lying by Omission, Dissimulation, Propaganda, Sleight of Hand, Bad Faith Argumentation, Bullshit, Dark Patterns

2013