The Oxford Handbook of Lying
, by Meibauer, JörgNote: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9780192863379 | 0192863371
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 4/27/2022
Jörg Meibauer, Professor of German Language and Linguistics, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz
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).
Preface
List of figures and tables
List of contributors
1. Introduction: What is lying? Towards an integrative approach, Jörg Meibauer
I Traditions
2. Classic philosophical approaches to lying and deception, James Edwin Mahon
3. Contemporary approaches to the philosophy of lying, James Edwin Mahon
4. Linguistic approaches to lying and deception, Karol J. Hardin
5. Psycholinguistic approaches to lying and deception, Lewis Bott and Emma Williams
6. Lying, deception, and the brain, Alexa Decker, Amanda Disney, Brianna D'Elia, and Julian Paul Keenan
II Concepts
7. Lying and truth, Stephen Wright
8. Lying and assertion, Mark Jay
9. Lying, belief, and knowledge, Matthew A. Benton
10. Lying, sincerity, and quality, Andreas Stokke
11. Lying and deception, Andrew Ortony and Swati Gupta
12. Lying and certainty, Neri Marsili
13. Lying and omissions, Don Fallis
14. Lying, implicating, and presupposing, Jörg Meibauer
15. Lying and self-deception, Kathi Beier
16. Lying, testimony, and epistemic vigilance, Eliot Michaelson
III Types of Lies and Deception
17. Knowledge lies and group lies, Julia Staffel
18. Selfless assertions, Jennifer Lackey
19. Bald-faced lies, Jörg Meibauer
20. Bullshitting, Andreas Stokke
21. Bluffing, Jennifer Perillo
22. White and prosocial lies, Simone Dietz
IV Distinctions
23. Lying and fiction, Emar Maier
24. Lying and quotation, Matthew S. McGlone and Maxim Baryshevtsev
25. Lying and humour, Marta Dynel
26. Lying, irony, and default interpretation, Rachel Giora
27. Lying and vagueness, Paul Egré
28. Lying, metaphor, and hyperbole, Claudia Claridge
29. Lying and politeness, Marina Terkourafi
V Domains
30. Development of lying and cognitive abilities, Victoria Talwar
31. Lyine and lie detection, Samantha Mann
32. Lying and computational linguistics, Kees van Deemter and Ehud Reiter
33. Lying in social psychology, Bella M. DePaulo
34. Lying and psychology, Kristina Suchotzki and Matthias Gamer
35. Lying and neuroscience, Giorgio Ganis
36. Lying and ethics, Thomas L. Carson
37. Lying and the law, Stuart P. Green
38. Lying in economics, Marta Serra-Garcia
39. Lying and education, Anita E. Kelly
40. Lying and discourse analysis, Dariusz Galasinski
41. Lying and deception in politics, Vian Bakir, Eric Herring, David Miller, and Piers Robinson
42. Lyng and history, Thomas L. Carson
43. Lying and the arts, Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer
44. Lying in different cultures, Fumiko Nishimura
References
Index
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