填空题
At the University of Virginia in Charlottesville,
psychology professor Bella DePaulo got 77 students and 70 townspeople to
volunteer for an unusual project. All kept diaries for a week, recording the
numbers and details of the lies they told. One student and six
Charlottesville residents professed to have told no falsehoods. The other 140
participants told 1535. {{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}}
{{/U}} Most strikingly, these tellers-of-a-thousand-lies reported
that their deceptions caused them "little preoccupation or regret." Might that
too be a lie? Perhaps. But there is evidence that this attitude toward casual
use of prevarication is common. Last year, for example, 20,000
middle- and high-schoolers were surveyed by the Josephson Institute of Ethics —
a nonprofit organization in Marina del Rey, Calif. devoted to character
education. Ninety-two percent of the teenagers admitted having lied to their
parents in the previous years, and 73 percent characterized themselves as
"serial liars," meaning they told lies weekly. Despite these admissions, 91
percent of all respondents said they were "satisfied with my own ethics and
character." Think how often we hear the expressions "I'll call
you" or "The check is in the mail." And then there are professions — lawyers,
experts, PR consultants — whose members seem to specialize in shaping or
spinning the truth to suit clients' needs. {{U}} {{U}} 2
{{/U}} {{/U}} "What's wrong with that.'?" Tom asked Professor
Josephson, president of the Josephson Institute. It's a question we might all
ask. Josephson replied by asking Tom to consider the lie from
his mother-in-law's point of view. Suppose that one day Tom' s child blurts out
the truth, and she discovers the deceit. Will she tell her son-in-law,
"Thank you for caring so much?" Or is she more likely to feel hurt and say, "How
could you have misled me all these years? And what else have you lied to me
about?" {{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}
How often do we compliment people on how well they look, or express our
appreciation for gifts, when we don't really mean it? Surely, these "nice lies"
are harmless and well intended, a necessary social lubricant. But like Tom, we
should remember the words of English novelist Sir Walt Scott, who wrote, "What a
tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive." Even
seemingly harmless falsehoods can have unforeseen consequences. Philosopher
Sissela Bok warns us that they can put us on a slippery slope. "After the first
lies, others can come more easily." {{U}} {{U}} 4
{{/U}} {{/U}} Who believes it anymore when they're told that
the person they want to reach by phone is "in a meeting"? By itself, that kind
of lie is of no great consequence. Still, the endless proliferation of these
little prevarication does not matter. Once they become common
enough, even the small untruths that are not meant to hurt encourage a certain
cynicism and loss of trust. Are all white lies to be avoided at
all costs? Not necessarily. The most understandable and forgivable lies
are an exchange of what ethicists refer to as the principle of trust for the
principle of caring, "like telling children about the tooth fairy, or deceiving
someone to set them up for a surprise party," Josephson says. "Still, we
must ask ourselves if we are willing to give our friends and associates the
authority to lie to us whenever they think it is for our own good."
{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}} And if you'
re not sure, Mark Twain has given us a good rule of thumb. "When in doubt, tell
the truth. It will confound your enemies and astound your friends."
A. When Tom tells a lie, his face may not show it, but certain
other changes in his body take place that would give him away. His pulse would
beat faster, his breath would come in gasps, and his blood pressure would
change. B. The lies were most often not what most of us
would call earth-shattering. Someone would pretend to be more positive or
supportive of a spouse or friend than he or she really was, or feign agreement
with a relative's opinion. C. Little white lies have
become ubiquitous, and the reasons we give each other for telling fibs are
familiar. For example, every year my friend, whom I'll call Tom, goes with his
wife and son to his mother-in-law' s home for Thanksgiving for dinner. Tom
doesn't quite like the pumpkin pie intensely, but he invariably tells her how
wonderful the pie is to avoid hurting her feelings. D.
Josephson suggests a simple test. If someone you lie to finds out the truth,
will he thank you for caring? Or will he feel his long-term trust in you has
been undermined? E. And what might Tom's mother-in-law
suspect about her own daughter? And will Tom's boy lie to his parents and yet be
satisfied with his own character? F. Take the
pumpkin-pie lies. In the first place, it wasn't just that he wanted his
mother-in-law to feel good. Whether he realized it or not, he really wanted her
to think highly of him. And after the initial deceit he needed to tell more lies
to cover up the first one.