Week #4 Discussions: Gimme Some Truth Answer

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Week #4 Discussions: Gimme Some Truth

 

Are you honest?  Do you always tell the truth?  Should you always tell the truth?  Did your parents raise you to always tell the truth?  How will you raise your children?

 

Michael Leviton’s “What I Learned About Love When I Stopped Being Honest” is an interesting look into his life and his relationship with the truth.  As this is a critical thinking class, our goal is to find, defend and practice the truth. Would life be better if everyone simply told the truth? What happens when we all have our own versions of the truth and are willing to lie about things that we believe will benefit us in the long run? As asked above, will you teach your children to lie, or like Leviton’s parents, make it clear that truth, above all, matters?

 

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Week #4 Discussions: Gimme Some Truth Answer

There is always something about honesty and the truth that often makes people awkward. Just like how Michael Leviton (2021) described the nature of man to “be liked that be honest,” white lies make strong propulsion of how people have behaved over the centuries. Honesty, in all its sense, can sometimes become cruel because it is the truth. Honest people observe that there are undeniable truths in a situation and a condition and it is their moral responsibility to say the truth and nothing but the truth. 

This question is taken from English 103 – Critical Reasoning and Writing » Fall 2021 » Discussions