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    Self-de·cep·tion
    /ˌselfdəˈsepSHən/

    noun

    • 1. the action or practice of allowing oneself to believe that a false or unvalidated feeling, idea, or situation is true: "Jane remarked on men's capacity for self-deception"
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  3. self-deception: [noun] the act of making oneself believe something that is not true.

  4. Self-deception. Self-deception is a process of denying or rationalizing away the relevance, significance, or importance of opposing evidence and logical argument. Self-deception involves convincing oneself of a truth (or lack of truth) so that one does not reveal any self-knowledge of the deception .

  5. Oct 17, 2006 · Virtually every aspect of self-deception, including its definition and paradigmatic cases, is a matter of controversy among philosophers. Minimally, self-deception involves a person who (a) as a consequence of some motivation or emotion, seems to acquire and maintain some false belief despite evidence to the contrary and (b) who may display behavior suggesting some awareness of the truth.

  6. SELF-DECEPTION definition: 1. the act of hiding the truth from yourself: 2. the act of hiding the truth from yourself: . Learn more.

  7. Aug 28, 2015 · Indeed, one could go so far as to argue that the self is nothing but the sum of its ego defenses, which are constantly shaping, upholding, protecting, and repairing it. The self is like a cracked ...

  8. In this view, self-deception can arise from, for example, selective attention, biased information search, or forgetting. In the second definition, self-deception is a motivated false belief that persists in spite of disconfirming evidence [e.g. 7,8]. In this view, not all positive illusions are self-deceptive, and biased information search does ...

  9. May 31, 2016 · Self-deception is seeing the world the way we wish it to be rather than the way it is. When people have a self-deception, they use their hopes, needs, desires, theory, ideology, prejudices, expectations, memories, and other psychological elements to construct the way they see the world. Furthermore, as humans sample information from their ...