Alex Wiegmann has edited a new volume on “Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Lying,” a further entry into Bloomsbury’s “Advances in Experimental Philosophy” series. See below for the table of contents.
- Emanuel Viebahn: “What Does it Take to Tell a Lie?”
- Romy Jaster and David Lanius: “The Concept of Fake News”
- Jörg Meibauer: “The Concept of Bullshit”
- Markus Kneer: “The Truth About Assertion and Retraction – A Review of the Empirical Literature”
- Shirly Orr: “Truth Evaluators – A Different Point of View in the Lying/Misleading Distinction”
- Alejandro Erut: “Cross-Cultural Studies on Concepts of Lying – Methodological Approaches and Their Findings”
- Mailin Antomo: “Lying With Gestures”
- Louisa Reins: “The Impact of Modality and Presentation Time on Judgments of Deceptive Implicatures as Cases of Lying – An Empirical Investigation”
- Izabela Skoczeń: “From Lying to Blaming and Perjury – Deceptive Implicatures in the Courtroom and the Materiality Requirement”
- Neele Engelmann: “Murderer at the Door! To Lie or to Mislead?”