Liesection
A liesection is a term used in experimenting with conscious beings when they lie about what they are consciously experiencing. For example, the conscious being questioned says that he is seeing a yellow color when he is actually seeing a red color in his visual field. He might say his name is John when he actually believes his name is Harry. There are many reasons why a conscious being might lie. Humans do it frequently. Sometimes because they are afraid of how the truth might effect them or others. Other reasons include teasing and wanting to cause confusion in others. A liesection is a type of behaviorsection that can be of any length from an behaviormoment to that of a behaviorpath -- the behavior of a conscious being for his lifetime. Behaviorsections can be part of a larger structure like a behaviorvenue where there are a number of closely related behaviorsections that are not honest about the consciousness that they are actually experiencing. It is harder to make up real memories and skills that certain other people have. You might pretend to be french but if you cannot speak French then people might not believe that you are french. Or if you say that you are George Washington the president of the US but have different memories from what the original Washington at that age should have, this would be evidence of lying and not having identical structure and functioning to that of the original. Of course, unless the original G. W. produced that same deciptive behavior at that time in his life.
When doing actual experiments into what consciousness a particular structure and functioning of matter will produce a liesection can frequently be discovered by extending the experiment until the person tells the truth about the lying event. There are also numerous ways as well such as changing the original structure and functioning in many different slight ways to see the many different responses under the same external conditions. There is also keeping the structure and functioning the same but changing the external conditions. For example, rather than continuing with the same questions as the original received the cidentireplica could be asked different question like "Why are you lying?"
Principle of liesections: If the original produced a liesection then any cidentireplica of that original will produce the exact same liesection at the exact same part of the physapath. If they do not then the original and cidentireplica are not structurally and functionally identical at that physasection of the physapath.
- A liepoint is a point on a liemoment, liesection, liepath, lievenue, lieregion, or liecontinuum.
- A liemoment is a behaviormoment where the self reference of consciousness is not honest about itself.
- A liepath is a behaviorpath that is lying about its conscious experiences at least intermittently for the entire life time of the body that is producing it.
- A lievenue is a grouping of liepaths.
- A lieregion is a section of a liecontinuum.
- A liecontinuum is a continuum structure of liepaths.