Speech Matters

Full Title: Speech Matters: On Lying, Morality, and the Law
Author / Editor: Seana Valentine Shiffrin
Publisher: Princeton University Press, 2015

 

Review © Metapsychology Vol. 21, No. 19
Reviewer: Bob Lane

Long before I studied philosophy my father taught me a profound lesson about speech. He was a proponent of the old observation that one should “say what you mean and mean what you say”. One day as he left for work he asked me, a boy of six, to pick up some trash from the back yard. “I will, Daddy!” said I with enthusiasm.

Upon returning that evening he asked if I had completed my chore. Having completely forgotten about my promise, I nevertheless responded “Oh, yes, Daddy!” not even considering that he would have seen the back yard when he drove his pickup into the back.

“Good boy,” he said. “go get your piggy bank and I will pay you for your work.” I got the piggy bank, sat on his lap, and he dropped two nickels into the bank. Each one seemed to shout “LIAR” as it landed in the ceramic pig.

I ran outside and did the cleanup I was supposed to have done during the day. Those coins dropping into that bank taught me that speech matters.

In human social life, the principal object is to communicate our attitudes, and hence it is of the first importance that everyone be truthful in respect of his thoughts, since without that, social intercourse ceases to be of any value. Only when a person voices his opinions can another tell what he thinks, and if he declares that he wishes to express his thoughts, he must also do it, for otherwise there can be no sociality among men. Fellowship among men is only the second condition of sociality; but the liar destroys this fellowship, and hence we despise a liar, since the lie makes it impossible for people to derive any fenefit from what he has to say. – Immanuel Kant, from his “Lectures on Ethics” [the head note to Chapter One]

Today we seem to be awash in BS. The “false news” meme is everywhere and people in many parts of the world have lost faith in organizations, public bodies, politicians, and in government. It is a particularly important time to be considering the nature and importance of speech – to remember that “Speech Matters.”

A recent study from Pew Research Center shows that public trust in government remains near historic lows in the USA even as the political landscape shifts. “Just two-in-ten Americans say they can trust the government in Washington to do hat is right “most of the time.”

In Canada our defense minister, the first Sikh to ever hold the position, is a decorated soldier who was awarded the Order of Military Merit for dedication and devotion to duty for his battlefield effort in Iraq s trying to explain why he embellished his record I public speeches. He is under fire by the Opposition and has been urged to resign his position. “The Minister of Defense has told a whopper about his record. That is not something for which you apologize, it is something for which you step down,” said an opposition leader in the House of Commons. Many citizens are saying the Minister has betrayed our trust in him. Speech matters.

Citizens are also aware of the occasional misstatement made in the advertising world, of exaggerated claims and unsupported statements. I addition there is an almost universal distrust of political utterances. Social media spread BS quickly and easily. Thoughtful discourse seems to be at an all time low point. A recent episode of “Law and Oder: SVU” highlights a story concerning an online “news” site that was targeting a congressman with false allegations of sex trafficking. The consequences were disastrous though fictional. When a popular television series makes a social concern the theme for an episode it becomes obvious that the concern is widespread. Speech matters.

Shiffrin’s book is a carefully reworked and brilliantly argued effort arising from the Carl G. Hempel Lecture Series. It consists of an introduction and six chapters:

1.    Lies and the Murderer Next Door

2.    Duress and Moral Progress

3.    A Thinker-Based Approach to Freedom of Speech

4.    Lying and Freedom of Speech

5.    Accommodation, Equality, and the Liar

6.    Sincerity and Institutional Values

Each chapter advances the argument that speech matters. Why? Because as her opening sentences sate: “We cannot develop or flourish in isolation. Our mutual interdependence is not merely material but also, importantly, mental. The exchange of thoughts, beliefs, emotions, perceptions, and ideas with others is essential to each person’s ability to function well as a thinker and as a moral agent.” Speech matters.

Shiffrin draws on Kant’s deontological argument as a basis for her moral positon in our contemporary society, while yet taking into consideration the ways in which consequences enter our complex human acts. Her analysis is deep, her examples thought provoking, and she confronts many complicated issues that are important such as police lies, puffery, and institutional values.

Speech matters.

 

© 2017 Bob Lane

 

Bob Lane is an emeritus professor of philosophy at Vancouver Island University in British Columbia.