By Arthur C. Brooks / The Atlantic

"o one wants to be seen as a liar. Liars are considered untrustworthy at best and immoral at worst. And yet, we are perfectly content to lie to ourselves all the time. "I'll enjoy this sleeve of Oreos today because my diet starts tomorrow," I might tell myself. Or, "I love my job; who cares that I complain about it constantly?" Or even—ironically—"I am always honest with myself." 

Deceiving yourself shouldn't make logical sense. After all, lying involves telling someone something you know to be untrue. When you are both the liar and one lied to, this means you have to both know the truth and not know the truth. In practice, that means willfully disregarding key knowledge to arrive at a conclusion that is more convenient than what the facts appear to suggest".





Image: Jan Buchczik / The Atlantic
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