The Use and Abuse of Deception
By Charles
Parselle
The word deceive is derived from
Latin, de- away + capere to take, decipere to ensnare, catch in a trap.
Deception is common human relationships. Deception
is common in negotiation. Most human relationships are conducted by way of
negotiation.
According to actress Sharon Stone: Women
know how to fake orgasm. Men know how to fake an entire
relationship.
The most common form of deception is self-deception.
Used in this sense it is a form of illusion. The buyer deceives herself as
to value of what is to be bought, generally undervaluing it. The seller deceives
herself as to value of what is to be sold, generally overvaluing it.
Sellers use all kinds of techniques to convince
a potential buyer that the object is worth the sellers valuation.
Similarly, buyers use techniques to persuade the buyer to sell.
In a litigated case the buyer is the defendant,
while the seller is the plaintiff. In effect, the plaintiff is selling the
injury back to the defendant for a particular cost, which legally is called
damages. The peculiarity of this situation is that the defendant buyer can
not walk away from the transaction. The defendant must either buy a settlement,
or face the risk of being forced to pay a valuation put on the injury by
a court. The plaintiff seller also faces the same dilemma. There is only
one potential buyer for the plaintiffs injury. If that buyer refuses
to buy at the valuation put upon the injury by the plaintiff seller, then
the plaintiff will be compelled to accept whatever valuation is put on the
injury by the court.
ARTICLE
CONTINUED BELOW
Breaking up with a sociopath narcissist? Be prepared for the battle
of your life! While you are an emotional basketcase, he is as Cold as Ice!
While you are left holding down the fort and dealing with the real-life
responsibilities, he walks away from everything leaving you to mop off
his stage and pay his bills. He will punish you in ways you couldn't possibly
have ever imagined...
....and not
even acknowledge it to himself! Why? Because he's off charming the socks
off of new women as if your years together didn't even
exist!
The sociopathic
narcissistic ex continually acts in abusive, bewildering and confusing
ways. He is not above committing destructive acts. When the breakup
becomes a reality, it is likely that his 'false persona' will completely
disappear all together and you will most likely experience the most hurtful
of behavior from him. He is completely lacking in empathy, and - since he
is not receiving any admiration from you anymore - he will dismiss you
and discard you as worthless to him, consequently dropping any fake
front that he use to put up in order to keep you in the relationship.
Click here to read 'The Counterfeit
Heart: Breaking Up With a Narcissist - the Sociopath in Your Life' by
Tigress Luv
Thus the peculiarity of any litigated case is
that neither party can walk away. There is only one potential buyer who is
the defendant, and if the seller plaintiff chooses to walk away then she
will receive nothing. But the risk of loss is high. The national average
is 50/50.
Plaintiffs and defendants therefore use all
means at their disposal, including self-deception, to persuade themselves
that they will beat the national average. And it is certain that one of them
is going to be correct. The uncertainty of litigated outcomes is the driving
force behind the effort of parties to negotiate a satisfactory result between
each other. It is an exercise in avoidance of risk. There is also the matter
of the expensive trial, because the costs associated are usually substantial,
and whichever side wins in the end, both sides have lost a great deal in
terms of financial costs, time expended and the stress of going through with
it, all of which add up to a powerful incentive to get the matter settled.
And indeed, settlement rates are extremely high; less than five percent of
litigated cases ever go to trial.
By no means all negotiations relate to events
that have already occurred. Indeed, most negotiations concerns future events,
but these are not the kinds of negotiation that usually require the assistance
of a mediator. Most business people are entirely capable of mediating by
themselves, and such negotiations are usually called contract negotiations,
occurring many millions of times every year in order to work out amicable
ways of profitable cooperation.
It is generally when things have gone wrong
that the presence of a mediator is helpful, and the reason for this is that
when something is turned into a TGW (thing gone wrong), there is always
associated with it the upset, the emotional reaction of the parties to the
difficulty.
People never enter into negotiation or dispute
resolution with respect to matters in the past that have gone right. In mediation
or in any situation in which one or more people are interacting, a person
who pays attention will more easily detect truth from falsehood.
Even where people are not trying to deceive,
and most people most of the time are not trying to deceive, the whole truth
of what they are seeking to convey may not be apparent even to them, but
to the listener who is paying attention the shadow truths are apparent more
to the listener than to the speaker. Often, the speaker is working hard to
convey her meaning but is not entirely sure what she wishes to communicate.
The listener will pick up everything in the tail end of a sentence, a word
here or there, an inflexion, a gesture, a throwaway line.
If the mediator is sitting there thinking what
she is going to say or do next, then she is paying attention to her own thought
processes and not to what is being communicated.
Paying attention, properly understood, is not
terribly hard work but on the contrary, has a light and airy quality. For
example, a person absorbed in a book or a movie or a piece of music or a
football game is paying close attention, but without a great deal of effort.
It is easy to pay attention when one is interested in the subject
matter.
The opposite of attention is distraction.
Peoples stories are not always consistent.
That does not necessarily mean they are lying. It means their own perception
of events alters as they focus their own attention on such events, bearing
in mind that such events nearly always happen in the past and are preserved
in memory. Because consistency is so valued in our society [Cialdini: Influence,
Science and Practice, 2001] when parties engage in the game of winning and
losing, which they do at trial because trial always results in a winner or
a loser, the attempt is always to catch the opponent in an
inconsistency.
But catching people out in inconsistencies is
not the mediators game at all. She knows that when a person concentrates
her mind on a past event, the perception of that event will change over time.
Different aspects will be brought into memory and over the course even of
a single day, varying interpretations of what happened may emerge. Also,
people express something a particular way, and an hour later will talk about
the same thing in a slightly different way. The complete mediator takes this
all in without harsh judgment.
People who lie all the time are sociopaths,
also called psychopaths. They are not very common. Because they do it all
the time, they are extremely good at lying. Their whole life is based on
the ability to deceive people. Therefore a sociopath may present herself
very well and sound convincing. But as they proceed, because they do not
tell the truth, the story does not add up. A detail here, a detail there,
a huge inconsistency that is then sought to be explained, building up over
a period of time, will teach any mediator unfortunate enough to run into
such a person that she is dealing with someone quite dangerous. Behind the
ordered façade and smiling face of a psychopath lie chaos and evil
intentions. Such a person will not settle a case. Such a person will probably
not attend mediation.
Everyone gets subjective perceptions mixed up
with objective reality from time to time. The difference lies in the extremity
of the psychopath. It should not be assumed that people who are inconsistent
or confused or who do not tell the truth are necessarily psychopaths. Most
people most of the time are quite ordinary. Nearly everyone is in the ordinary
range. At one end of the range are psychopaths and criminals, at the other
geniuses and saints. Most of us are in the middle, and mediators will have
to deal with what is normal nearly all the time.
If a mediator finds herself falling into doubt
and confusion, which cannot be sorted out by the exercise of reason, persuasion,
further study and attempts to bring order into the situation, then she may
have reason to suspect what is going on.
Doubt is not necessarily a bad thing. Doubt
has a bad rap because it is uncomfortable. It is the fork in the road, without
clear directions which way to proceed. But doubt is the mediators friend,
as it is the friend of all explorers in any field. Doubt itself has a friend,
which is hope. Without hope, doubt can result in paralysis, a complete inability
to move at all. Certainty also generally results in no movement, because
why should one move if one is certain of where one is. Columbus had hope,
so he moved even though he was uncertain of the outcome. That example applies
to countless others in the fields of science, technology, literature,
exploration, etc. Hope is the feeling that what is desired is also possible,
or that events may turn out for the best.
As the man said: Who are you going to
believe, me or your lying eyes.
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