Games, Lies & Deceit

Games, Lies & Deceit

Author: DJ Cole

Publisher: AuthorHouse

Published: 2012-10-31

Total Pages: 116

ISBN-13: 9781477277157

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Leza Robinson comes up tough and has not been home in years. After her Aunt dies she returns to Youngstown, Ohio. Only to find out her ex, Victor is angrier then ever and wants his money back that she took or she will pay for it with her life. Desiree Baldwin has the perfect life or so it seems. She has a model like body and a big-time banker husband. All that comes crashing down when she walks in on her husband and what she thought was his cousin, in bed. Samantha Rose is what you call hood royalty. To the untrained eye she runs a successful modeling agency. However, all the ballers call her when they want some eyecandy. She is a glorified madam for the hood. Hoods from Youngstown, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Columbus and Akron, know who she is. It comes to light that there is a snitch in her crew and he out to get her. Together all three of their lives intertwine and complete chaos erupts threating to shatter friendships and endanger lives. This is a fresh new twist on how women handle themselves in the hood.


Games of Deceit

Games of Deceit

Author: Pan Pantziarka

Publisher: Virgin Books Limited

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 9780753501191

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DCI Vallance and Sarah Fairfax team up once again when an old friend of Sarah's claims someone at work is trying to kill her. But her squeaky clean colleagues don't tally with the violent attacks. When Vallance becomes sexually involved with Carol he discovers she has not been telling the truth.


The Games He Play Cause the Lies He Told 2

The Games He Play Cause the Lies He Told 2

Author: Liz Doss

Publisher:

Published: 2016-07-05

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13: 9781535100168

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Keith is back with his old ways with his adultery, deceit, lust, lies and true intentions. How do you fall in love with someone who was only a casualty of war? How do you fall in love with someone that was your suppose be an assignment?When people you trust turns on you who could you trust? When friends seems not to be your friends, family did nothing but keep secrets from you and your life is a whole lie who do you turn to? When everything is coming out there is more blasts from the past? When people trying to protect you from lifestyle you were born into are secrets actually helping or hurting? It's not all about the "Games He Played All This Leads Up To The Lies Everyone Told."


Truth Games

Truth Games

Author: John Forrester

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 230

ISBN-13: 9780674001794

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This book offers a rich philosophical and historical perspective on the mechanics, moral dilemmas, and rippling implications of psychoanalysis. Original, witty, incisive, these essays provide a new understanding of the uses and abuses and the ultimate significance of truth telling and lying, trust and confidence as they operate in psychoanalysis


Lying and Deception in Everyday Life

Lying and Deception in Everyday Life

Author: Michael Lewis

Publisher: Guilford Press

Published: 1993-02-05

Total Pages: 244

ISBN-13: 9780898628944

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"I speak the truth, not so much as I would, but as much as I dare...."-- Montaigne "All cruel people describe themselves as paragons of frankness.'" -- Tennessee Williams Truth and deception--like good and evil--have long been viewed as diametrically opposed and unreconcilable. Yet, few people can honestly claim they never lie. In fact, deception is practiced habitually in day-to-day life--from the polite compliment that doesn't accurately relay one's true feelings, to self-deception about one's own motivations. What fuels the need for people to intricately construct lies and illusions about their own lives? If deceptions are unconscious, does it mean that we are not responsible for their consequences? Why does self-deception or the need for illusion make us feel uncomfortable? Taking into account the sheer ubiquity and ordinariness of deception, this interdisciplinary work moves away from the cut-and-dried notion of duplicity as evil and illuminates the ways in which deception can also be understood as a adaptive response to the demands of living with others. The book articulates the boundaries between unethical and adaptive deception demonstrating how some lies serve socially approved goals, while others provoke distrust and condemnation. Throughout, the volume focuses on the range of emotions--from feelings of shame, fear, or envy, to those of concern and compassion--that motivate our desire to deceive ourselves and others. Providing an interdisciplinary exploration of the widespread phenomenon of lying and deception, this volume promotes a more fully integrated understanding of how people function in their everyday lives. Case illustrations, humor and wit, concrete examples, and even a mock television sitcom script bring the ideas to life for clinical practitioners, behavioral scientists, and philosophers, and for students in these realms.


Deception

Deception

Author: Robert W. Mitchell

Publisher: SUNY Press

Published: 1986-01-01

Total Pages: 422

ISBN-13: 9780887061073

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Mitchell and Thompson have compiled the first interdisciplinary study of deception and its manifestations in a variety of animal species. Deception is unique in that it presents detailed explorations of the broadest array of deceptive behavior, ranging from deceptive signaling in fireflies and stomatopods, to false-alarm calling by birds and foxes, to playful manipulating between people and dogs, to deceiving within intimate human relationships. It offers a historical overview of the problem of deception in related fields of animal behavior, philosophical analyses of the meaning and significance of deception in evolutionary and psychological theories, and diverse perspectives on deception--philosophical, ecological, evolutionary, ethological, developmental, psychological, anthropological, and historical. The contributions gathered herein afford scientists the opportunity to discover something about the formal properties of deception, enabling them to explore and evaluate the belief that one set of descriptive and perhaps explanatory structures is suitable for both biological and psychological phenomena.


A Pack of Lies

A Pack of Lies

Author: John Arundel Barnes

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1994-06-09

Total Pages: 222

ISBN-13: 9780521459785

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Defining lies as statements that are intended to deceive, this book considers the contexts in which people tell lies, how they are detected and sometimes exposed, and the consequences for the liars themselves, their dupes, and the wider society. The author provides examples from a number of cultures with distinctive religious and ethical traditions, and delineates domains where lying is the norm, domains that are ambiguous and the one domain (science) that requires truthtelling. He refers to experimental studies on children that show how, at an early age, they acquire the capactiy to lie and learn when it is appropriate to do so. He reviews how lying has been evaluated by moralists, examines why we do not regard novels as lies and relates the human capacity to lie to deceit among other animal species. He concludes that although there are, in all societies, good pragmatic reasons for not lying all the time, there are also strong reasons for lying some of the time.


Lying and Mistrust in the Continuous Deception Game

Lying and Mistrust in the Continuous Deception Game

Author: Tobias Beck

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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I present a novel experimental design to measure lying and mistrust as continuous variables on an individual level. My experiment is a sender-receiver game framed as an investment game. It features two players: firstly, an advisor with complete information (i.e., the sender) who is incentivized to lie about the true value of an optimal investment and, secondly, an investor with incomplete information (i.e., the receiver) who is incentivized to invest optimally and therefore must rely on the alleged optimum reported by the advisor. The extents of lying and mistrust are both measured on continuous scales. This allows observing more differentiated behavior and therefore enables testing of more sophisticated theoretical predictions. I find that the senders lie by overstating the true value of the optimum to an average extent of about 148%, while the receivers suspect them to do so by only 56%. The senders seldomly lie to the fullest possible extent as they correctly expect the receivers to disproportionally mistrust lies of such a high extent. This indicates that people make strategic considerations about their potential to manipulate others when lying. In line with this, I discover that lying and mistrusting behavior can be predicted by first-order beliefs about the other player. Consistent with previous studies, my findings support the conjecture that lying costs increase with the extent of lying. In addition, I provide evidence for some endogenous preference for trust. Both players' behaviors and beliefs are consistent over time. Moreover, my ex ante classification of both players' strategy sets is consistent with their ex post self-assessment of their own behavior within the experiment.


They Aren't, Until I Call Them

They Aren't, Until I Call Them

Author: Enikő Bollobás

Publisher: Peter Lang

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 9783631589823

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The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data is available in the internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de.


Cheating and Deception

Cheating and Deception

Author: J. Bowyer Bell

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-09-04

Total Pages: 263

ISBN-13: 1351529269

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Cheating and deception are terms often used but rarely defined. They summon up unpleasant connotations; even those deeply involved with cheating and deception rationalize why they have been driven to it. Particularly for Americans and much of Western civilization, official cheating, government duplicity, cheating as policy, and conscious, contrived deception, are all unacceptable except as a last resort in response to threat of extinction. As a distasteful tool, deception is rarely used to achieve national interests, unless in relation to the deployment of military force. As an area of study, it has by and large been ignored.Intrigued by attitudes toward cheating and deception, the authors decided to analyze its roots, structure, and process. They asked fundamental questions: are there categories of deception, general steps in the process of deception, and ways to evaluate its results across time and in different modes? The book that results is a typology of kinds of deception, beginning with military deception, but extending into other categories and stages.In his introduction to this new edition, Bell outlines how the book came to be written, describes the mixed emotions toward the subject displayed by govenmental and nongovernmental funding sources, and speculates about its critical and commercial reception. He discusses widespread new interest in the subject, the research that has been undertaken since this book was first published, and its limitations.This book provides a general overview of this complex subject, creating a framework for analysis of specific instances of cheating or deception. It will be of particular interest to political scientists, those interested in military affairs and strategy, and psychologists. The general reader will find the book written with a light touch, drawing examples of cheating and deception in the pursuit of love and money. The specialist reader will be intrigued by its broad-ranging examples drawn from policy and politics,