The above statement highlights the âteleologicalâ approach to truth. It suggests that the moral value of an action is determined not just by the act itself, but by the ultimate outcome it produces for society.
Justification of Falsehood
Utilitarian ethics – Maximising overall welfare. Eg- During COVID-19, some governments delayed announcing lockdowns to prevent mass panic.
Principle of non-maleficence – Preventing harm. Eg- Doctors not disclosing terminal diagnoses to prevent severe psychological shock.
Doctrine of double effect – Harm avoided outweighs moral cost. Eg- Undercover police deceive suspects to dismantle trafficking networks.
To maintain social harmony. Eg- administration declaring minor scuffle between two communities as a “personal dispute” to prevent a city-wide riot.
Emergency ethics – in wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies. – Winston Churchill.
Public interest principle – Eg- Withholding sensitive information during terror attacks to avoid aiding perpetrators.
Virtue ethics – Compassion and prudence over rigid honesty.
Protection of life – Right to life supersedes right to information. Eg- providing “New Identities” under witness protection
Diplomatic De-escalation- During war, “back-channel” communications involve tactical denials to give face-saving exit to both countries.
Counter-argument
Erodes trust in governance.
Slippery slope – âNoble liesâ justify authoritarianism.
âhiding failures.â Eg- falsifying COVID deaths
Violates autonomy and right to truth.
Accountability loss – Lies prevent public scrutiny.
Long-term harm – Eg- initial denials of Chernobylâs severity
Moral corrosion – Ends justify means mentality spreads injustice.
The Tirukkural does not provide a “license to lie” but rather a “test of virtue.” Lie is justified only when the good produced is “unblemished” (meaning it harms no one else) and “common” (benefiting all).