lying lying lying

This topic submitted by drew loeffelman eric (dvankat@yahoo.com) at 10:04 pm on 2/22/01. Additions were last made on Saturday, March 2, 2002. Section: Cummins.


I once caught one THIS BIG!


“Oh what a tangled web we weave, when we practice to deceive”
--Wild Bill Shakespeare

Introduction

We intend to explore the topic of lying, causes and results thereof. Using Miami students as subjects, we wish to uncover the prevalence and severity of lying on this campus. Our inquiry pertains specifically to dormitory roommates, since sharing such a small space creates a very intimate relationship in most cases. Being around another person as much as one is around their roommate, complex situations are inevitable. This is why we believe that by focusing on roommate relationships, the most intricate, yet common, lying situations will surface. Additionally, we feel that Miami’s campus is an adequate representation of society and real-world situations. Thus, we feel that the conclusions made through this research project may be projected towards larger scale applications.
In part because of the perceived degradation of today’s society in terms of human character (popularity of violence, etc), we believe that our research will show that the vast majority of Miami students lie to others. We also hypothesize that the majority of Miami students in residence halls have lied to their roommates. Although we are unsure whether or not lying is directly related to human nature, we feel that the project will shed light on the subject. Subsequently, our conclusion should give weight to answering the question either in the affirmative or negative. Wright states, “organisms may present themselves as whatever it is in their genetic interests to seem like. People appear to no exception.”(p263) He also asserts that “the conventional view that natural selection favors nervous systems which produce ever more accurate images of the world must be a very na•ve view of mental evolution.”(p264) We believe this to be proof enough that Wright believes in a human nature in which lying is an integral part. The organism which lies to their colleagues is usually empowered, at the least temporarily, and stands a better chance of getting their genetic material furthered.
In an attempt to understand what causes lying or truthfulness, another aspect of our data collection is the categorization of students by sex and age. We hypothesize that there is no correlation between sex or age and increased or decreased lying.
From our project, we hope to uncover some of the facts about college students, and Miami students in particular. While we acknowledge that most people would agree with our hypotheses that the majority of Miami students lie to others and their roommates, it is scientifically beneficial to do our part in proving this belief. This research is also interesting because we assume that there will be wide degree of variance among students, and it will be exciting to see this reflected in our study. Because of the broad range of lies that people tell, we are looking forward to deciphering this. Our motto and rallying cry throughout the project comes from J.A. Barnes’ book A Pack of Lies, wherein he states, “The only institution which has the pursuit of truth as its principle value is science.”(p54) This, and hard work, will guide us to reliable evidence supporting or negating our hypotheses.

Relevance to Research Question

As a group, we hope that our statistical data will represent society as a whole. The lying that takes place in residence halls on Miami University’s campus is similar to the lying that is done on a national or international level. Lying is a common phenomena in our society. We see this in education, law enforcement, business, the press, and many other areas. Society is full of incidents when people lie to get ahead in their jobs, organizations, socio-economic classes or even family issues. Government officials are constantly in the midst of “not telling the entire story” so that their own jobs are kept intact. For example, when the scandal involving former White House intern Monica Lewinsky and former President Bill Clinton first came to the American public, the former President lied. He was on the television being broadcasted to millions of viewers across the country and he lied. Later, ‘Slick Willy’ “clarified” his remarks, but the damage had already been done. As a whole, the American public began to view Clinton is disrespectful, unfit to be a leader, and a father with highly immoral values. We feel that Clinton’s actions only reflect us as a whole. Granted, there are truthful people, but they appear to be few and far between. Most people in today’s society are looking out for their own benefit and will do anything that it takes to achieve those interests. It is interesting that Miami’s students are the future government officials, business leaders, law enforcement officials, and journalists.
In order to better understand our project we plan on incorporating several previous works on lying into our project. The Battle for Human Nature is an excellent study on sociobiology and its effects on morality. This book should more effectively help us flesh out Wright’s view of lying and its moral consequences in an evolutionary context. Our second book of interest is The Book of Lies, it is important mainly because it shows how lies have shaped human history throughout the ages. Also, the chapter of most importance is that of lies between the sexes, which should help us with our questions of gender and lying. Another book that deals with differences between the sexes and lying is The Dance of Deception, which covers the topics of how women lie to each other and the opposite sex. Both of these books should be useful in determining whether or not female roommates lie more often than male roommates. By the Grace of Guile is another book that discusses the socio-biological reasons for deception and self-deception. It discusses not only the evolutionary reasons for deception, but also why it is necessary for social cohesion. How Honesty Testing Works is a book that will be very useful in our actual test taking as it describes methods for seeing if someone is lying or not. And by understanding the give away signals for lies we can further understand this phenomenon. A Pack of Lies is an important work that focuses on lies and their effect on relationships, including roommates! We feel that this book will provide us with a great insight into our project, and its outcome. The book Lies, Lies LIES!! takes a little from all of our other books and covers everything from the biology of lying to lie detection to deceptions role in society. Our final book is Subjects of Deceit, a Phenomenology of Lying, and it is concerned primarily with the psychology of lies along with how this effects philosophy’s view of lies. While it may not seem to have much to do with our project we feel that it will add a really interdisciplinary edge to our project by incorporating this text.

Materials and Methods

Our experimental design consists primarily of a survey sheet, which is included later in the proposal. The survey questions allow for us to make connections between the different sets of data. For example, informational questions such as gender, major, age, and spirituality will allow us to make strong conclusions about specific groups. Our design is statistically sound because the majority of questions on the survey sheet ask for a yes or no, or number-based response. This dramatically reduces the possibility of flimsy for unreliable answers, which would cloud our data. Although we recognize that this may be a sensitive issue for some people, our main goal is to be scientific: we are specifically collecting data, and finding comparisons in the data through unbiased means, and are not judging the individuals who are responding to our survey.
To analyze our survey data, we will be using the computer program StatView. This will allow us to categorize and sort our data into sections, focusing on specific parts of the survey. And after all of our data is analyzed in StatView, we can pick apart certain aspects and balance them with our hypotheses and lit reviews.
Besides the survey, we will be using journal articles and books on the topic of lying, and using their data and hypotheses to relate to our project. We will distribute surveys to members of our class, and will engage them in discussion pertaining to our topic. Their opinions are valuable to assisting us in carrying out our project, handling the surveys, and forming our hypotheses.
Our survey audience includes students living in the three Western College Program dormitories, plus three other main campus dorms. We would like to survey Clawson Hall, the international dorm, as we believe the broad range of backgrounds there will be interesting. The remaining two dorms will chosen one from first-year buildings, and the other from an upper-class building. We plan to distribute 120 surveys, divided evenly as 20 per dorm. This will total 60 surveys on Western campus, and 60 surveys on main campus—an even split between the “two campuses.”

click here for our sample survey.

Our time-line of research:
Week 8: Poster presentation, and beginning of survey data collection (3 dorms)
Week 9: Finish survey collection (3 dorms). Mid-term exam and progress report.
Week 10: Data tabulation
Week 11: Data tabulation continued. Progress report.
Week 12: Data tabulation continued. Nature autobiography due.
Week 13: Data tabulation continued. Progress report.
Week 14: Data tabulation continued. Begin final report.
Week 15: Write final report.
Week 16: Due.

Next Article

Return to the Topic Menu


Here is a list of responses that have been posted to this Study...

IMPORTANT: Press the Browser Reload button to view the latest contribution.

Respond to this Submission!

IMPORTANT: For each Response, make sure the title of the response is different than previous titles shown above!

Response Title:
Author(s):

E-Mail:
Professor's Name (Choose either Cummins or Myers):
Optional: For Further Info on this Topic, Check out this WWW Site:
Response Text:



Article complete. Click HERE to return to the Human Nature Menu.

Visit the rest of the site!

Site NAVIGATION--Table of Contents

Listen to a "Voice Navigation" Intro! (Quicktime or MP3)

Google
Search WWW WITHIN-SITE Keyword Search!!

WEATHER & EARTH SCIENCE RESOURCES

TROPICAL ECOSYSTEM FIELD COURSES

Hays' Tarantula Page| Ohio Bird Photo Collection | Tropical Bird Collection | Costa Rica Image Collection | Hays' Marine Ecology Images and Movies |Local Watershed Fish Studies| Wildflowers, Arthropods, ETC in SW Ohio | Earth Science Resources | Astronomy Links | Global Change | Marine Ecology "Creature Study Guide" |

OTHER ACADEMIC COURSES, STUDENT RESEARCH, OTHER STUFF

| Educational Philosophy | Discovery Labs: Moon, Geologic Time, Sun, Taxonomy, Frisbee | Project Dragonfly | Vita |Field Course Postings | Student Research Postings | Nature/Science Autobiography | Environmental Programs at Miami University

TEACHING TOOLS & OTHER STUFF

Daily Necessities: Macintosh Resources |Search Engines | Library Resources|Server Stats| Family Album | View My Schedule | View Guestbook | Western College "Multimedia Potpourri"