Falsity
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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- | [[Image:Doré's caricature of Münchhausen.jpg|200px|thumb|left| | + | [[Image:Doré's caricature of Münchhausen.jpg|200px|thumb|left|[[Baron Münchhausen]], the archetypical [[unreliable narrator]], illustration: ''[[Doré's caricature of Münchhausen]]'']] |
- | [[Doré's caricature of Münchhausen]], a portrait bust of [[Baron Münchhausen]], the archetypical [[unreliable narrator]]]] | + | [[Image:Henri Robin and a Specter, 1863 by Eugène Thiébault.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A fake: [[Henri Robin]] and a [[Specter]], [[1863]] by [[Eugène Thiébault]]]] |
- | [[Image:Henri Robin and a Specter, 1863 by Eugène Thiébault.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Henri Robin]] and a [[Specter]], [[1863]] by [[Eugène Thiébault]]]] | + | |
[[Image: True and False Griffins from John Ruskin's Stones of Venice (1851-1853)..jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[True and False Griffins]]'' from [[John Ruskin]]'s ''[[Modern Painters]]'' (Part IV. Of Many Things), first published in 1856.]] | [[Image: True and False Griffins from John Ruskin's Stones of Venice (1851-1853)..jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[True and False Griffins]]'' from [[John Ruskin]]'s ''[[Modern Painters]]'' (Part IV. Of Many Things), first published in 1856.]] | ||
{{Template}} | {{Template}} | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* [[Fake]] | * [[Fake]] | ||
- | *[[False (logic)]] | ||
*[[Lie]] or falsehood, a type of deception in the form of an untruthful statement | *[[Lie]] or falsehood, a type of deception in the form of an untruthful statement | ||
*[[Falsity]] or falsehood, in law, deceitfulness by one party that results in damage to another | *[[Falsity]] or falsehood, in law, deceitfulness by one party that results in damage to another | ||
*[[Falsies]] padding for use in a brassiere to create the appearance of larger breasts | *[[Falsies]] padding for use in a brassiere to create the appearance of larger breasts | ||
- | ==See also== | ||
*[[False accusations]] | *[[False accusations]] | ||
*[[False advertising]] | *[[False advertising]] |
Revision as of 11:28, 9 March 2016
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False is the antonym of the adjective true.
Falsity
Falsity (from Latin falsitas) or falsehood is a perversion of truth originating in the deceitfulness of one party, and culminating in the damage of another party. Falsity is also a measure of the quality or extent of the falseness of something, while a falsehood may also mean simply an incorrect (false) statement, independent of any intention to deceive.
In the Frege-Church ontology, "truth" is the denotation of a true proposition, while "falsity" is the denotation of false propositions.
In esthetics, falsity is ugly, and truth is beautiful.
In existentialism, falsity is usually a thing to be avoided, and is not desired.
Examples
- Counterfeiting money, or attempting to coin genuine legal tender without due authorization;
- tampering with wills, codicils, or such-like legal instruments;
- prying into the correspondence of others to their prejudice;
- using false weights and measures,
- adulterating merchandise, so as to render saleable what purchasers would otherwise never buy, or so as to derive larger profits from goods otherwise marketable only at lower figures;
- bribing judges,
- suborning witnesses;
- advancing false testimony;
- manufacturing spurious seals;
- forging signatures;
- padding accounts;
- interpolating the texts of legal enactments; and
- sharing in the pretended birth of supposititious offspring
are among the chief forms which this crime assumes.
See also
- Fake
- Lie or falsehood, a type of deception in the form of an untruthful statement
- Falsity or falsehood, in law, deceitfulness by one party that results in damage to another
- Falsies padding for use in a brassiere to create the appearance of larger breasts
- False accusations
- False advertising
- False alarm
- False arrest
- False confession
- "False consciousness" is the Marxist concept that the proletariat are misguided as ... False consciousness is theoretically linked with the concepts of the ...
- False conviction
- False dilemma
- False document: a form of verisimilitude that attempts to create in the reader (viewer, audience, etc) a sense of authenticity beyond the normal and ...
- False ending
- False etymology
- False flag
- False friend
- False gharial
- False hero
- False imprisonment
- False memory
- False neurotransmitter
- False pregnancy
- False prophet
- False self
- False start