Does Pinocchio's nose grow only when he knows he is lying?

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I have been giving a thought to this statement:




If Pinocchio’s nose grows whenever he pronounces a false statement, it would make a marvellous tool for science, and Pinocchio could test any hypothesis easily and instantly.




source



Naturally, Pinocchio is not all-knowing, therefore a question raises, does he have to be aware that he is lying for his nose to grow? Or does it grow every time a statement he says is false?



I am mostly interested in the original The Adventures of Pinocchio, but if there is no sufficient information, any derived works like the Disney movie will work too.










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  • Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    4 hours ago
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












I have been giving a thought to this statement:




If Pinocchio’s nose grows whenever he pronounces a false statement, it would make a marvellous tool for science, and Pinocchio could test any hypothesis easily and instantly.




source



Naturally, Pinocchio is not all-knowing, therefore a question raises, does he have to be aware that he is lying for his nose to grow? Or does it grow every time a statement he says is false?



I am mostly interested in the original The Adventures of Pinocchio, but if there is no sufficient information, any derived works like the Disney movie will work too.










share|improve this question





















  • Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    4 hours ago












up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











I have been giving a thought to this statement:




If Pinocchio’s nose grows whenever he pronounces a false statement, it would make a marvellous tool for science, and Pinocchio could test any hypothesis easily and instantly.




source



Naturally, Pinocchio is not all-knowing, therefore a question raises, does he have to be aware that he is lying for his nose to grow? Or does it grow every time a statement he says is false?



I am mostly interested in the original The Adventures of Pinocchio, but if there is no sufficient information, any derived works like the Disney movie will work too.










share|improve this question













I have been giving a thought to this statement:




If Pinocchio’s nose grows whenever he pronounces a false statement, it would make a marvellous tool for science, and Pinocchio could test any hypothesis easily and instantly.




source



Naturally, Pinocchio is not all-knowing, therefore a question raises, does he have to be aware that he is lying for his nose to grow? Or does it grow every time a statement he says is false?



I am mostly interested in the original The Adventures of Pinocchio, but if there is no sufficient information, any derived works like the Disney movie will work too.







the-adventures-of-pinocchio






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asked 4 hours ago









Edmund Dantes

4,5802441




4,5802441











  • Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    4 hours ago
















  • Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
    – ApproachingDarknessFish
    4 hours ago















Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
– ApproachingDarknessFish
4 hours ago




Of course, scientifically verifying that Pinocchio's nose behaves as described would quite a feat in and of itself.
– ApproachingDarknessFish
4 hours ago










1 Answer
1






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up vote
5
down vote













Here is the text from The Adventures of Pinocchio where the fairy tells him why his nose is growing:




The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

"Why do you laugh?" the Marionette asked her,
worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

"I am laughing at your lies."

"How do you know I am lying?"

"Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two
kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses.
Yours, just now, happen to have long noses."




The Oxford dictionary defines a lie as:




an intentionally false statement.




Merriam Webster's definition of a lie is:




to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive




While we can't verify that the author went by these particular definitions, the meaning of "lies" can be presumed to be equivalent to the above definitions. The defining factor of a lie that separates it from a mere false statement is that there is an intent to falsify something.



I doubt we will ever find a canonical instance where Pinocchio states a false statement (without an intention to deceive) just to test if his nose grows. Till the time that happens (if it does), I submit that we assume that Pinocchio cannot be used as a marvellous tool for science, due to the distinction between a false statement and a lie.






share|improve this answer




















  • Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
    – James from NZ
    2 hours ago










  • Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
    – sudhanva
    2 hours ago










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
5
down vote













Here is the text from The Adventures of Pinocchio where the fairy tells him why his nose is growing:




The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

"Why do you laugh?" the Marionette asked her,
worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

"I am laughing at your lies."

"How do you know I am lying?"

"Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two
kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses.
Yours, just now, happen to have long noses."




The Oxford dictionary defines a lie as:




an intentionally false statement.




Merriam Webster's definition of a lie is:




to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive




While we can't verify that the author went by these particular definitions, the meaning of "lies" can be presumed to be equivalent to the above definitions. The defining factor of a lie that separates it from a mere false statement is that there is an intent to falsify something.



I doubt we will ever find a canonical instance where Pinocchio states a false statement (without an intention to deceive) just to test if his nose grows. Till the time that happens (if it does), I submit that we assume that Pinocchio cannot be used as a marvellous tool for science, due to the distinction between a false statement and a lie.






share|improve this answer




















  • Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
    – James from NZ
    2 hours ago










  • Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
    – sudhanva
    2 hours ago














up vote
5
down vote













Here is the text from The Adventures of Pinocchio where the fairy tells him why his nose is growing:




The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

"Why do you laugh?" the Marionette asked her,
worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

"I am laughing at your lies."

"How do you know I am lying?"

"Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two
kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses.
Yours, just now, happen to have long noses."




The Oxford dictionary defines a lie as:




an intentionally false statement.




Merriam Webster's definition of a lie is:




to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive




While we can't verify that the author went by these particular definitions, the meaning of "lies" can be presumed to be equivalent to the above definitions. The defining factor of a lie that separates it from a mere false statement is that there is an intent to falsify something.



I doubt we will ever find a canonical instance where Pinocchio states a false statement (without an intention to deceive) just to test if his nose grows. Till the time that happens (if it does), I submit that we assume that Pinocchio cannot be used as a marvellous tool for science, due to the distinction between a false statement and a lie.






share|improve this answer




















  • Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
    – James from NZ
    2 hours ago










  • Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
    – sudhanva
    2 hours ago












up vote
5
down vote










up vote
5
down vote









Here is the text from The Adventures of Pinocchio where the fairy tells him why his nose is growing:




The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

"Why do you laugh?" the Marionette asked her,
worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

"I am laughing at your lies."

"How do you know I am lying?"

"Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two
kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses.
Yours, just now, happen to have long noses."




The Oxford dictionary defines a lie as:




an intentionally false statement.




Merriam Webster's definition of a lie is:




to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive




While we can't verify that the author went by these particular definitions, the meaning of "lies" can be presumed to be equivalent to the above definitions. The defining factor of a lie that separates it from a mere false statement is that there is an intent to falsify something.



I doubt we will ever find a canonical instance where Pinocchio states a false statement (without an intention to deceive) just to test if his nose grows. Till the time that happens (if it does), I submit that we assume that Pinocchio cannot be used as a marvellous tool for science, due to the distinction between a false statement and a lie.






share|improve this answer












Here is the text from The Adventures of Pinocchio where the fairy tells him why his nose is growing:




The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

"Why do you laugh?" the Marionette asked her,
worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

"I am laughing at your lies."

"How do you know I am lying?"

"Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two
kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses.
Yours, just now, happen to have long noses."




The Oxford dictionary defines a lie as:




an intentionally false statement.




Merriam Webster's definition of a lie is:




to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive




While we can't verify that the author went by these particular definitions, the meaning of "lies" can be presumed to be equivalent to the above definitions. The defining factor of a lie that separates it from a mere false statement is that there is an intent to falsify something.



I doubt we will ever find a canonical instance where Pinocchio states a false statement (without an intention to deceive) just to test if his nose grows. Till the time that happens (if it does), I submit that we assume that Pinocchio cannot be used as a marvellous tool for science, due to the distinction between a false statement and a lie.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









sudhanva

3,35211551




3,35211551











  • Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
    – James from NZ
    2 hours ago










  • Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
    – sudhanva
    2 hours ago
















  • Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
    – James from NZ
    2 hours ago










  • Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
    – sudhanva
    2 hours ago















Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
– James from NZ
2 hours ago




Rats! Imagine the wonders humanity could have discovered, and the changes made to our lives and beliefs.
– James from NZ
2 hours ago












Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
– sudhanva
2 hours ago




Indeed. Humanty's biggest questions would've been answered. Just make Pinocchio says things like "God exists" and "Aliens exist".
– sudhanva
2 hours ago

















 

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