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If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
If Edith Wharton lived in the Age of Innocence, surely we now live in the Age of Deception.
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Pamela Meyer:
Studies by several different researchers have shown that the number of lies we're told each day isPamela Meyer:
Truth in our society often takes a back seat to securing gainful consequences.Pamela Meyer:
Lying is the rule, not the exception.Pamela Meyer:
One-year-olds learn concealment. Five-year-olds lie outright: they manipulate via flattery. Nine-yePamela Meyer:
By the time we enter this work world and we're breadwinners, we enter a world that's just clutteredPamela Meyer:
Lying is a cooperative act. Think about it. A lie has no power whatsoever by its mere utterance. ItPamela Meyer:
We lie more to strangers than we lie to co-workers. Extroverts lie more than introverts. Men lie eiPamela Meyer:
Tales of cheating on school and college tests are rife. There have been instances where teachers haPamela Meyer:
Liars do look you in the eye. They do not always stutter, stammer, blush or fidget.Pamela Meyer:
Good liars are skilled at reading others well, putting them at ease, managing their own emotions, a