Cyrus
Regular Poster
- MBTI
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 4w3
To understand my real question and how I'm defining manipulation, I offer this prologue:
Manipulation
(definition of manipulate: to handle or control (a tool, mechanism, etc.), typically in a skillful manner)
is different than deception
(definition of deceive: to cause (someone) to believe something that is not true, typically in order to gain some personal advantage).
Manipulation is performed daily: every commercial is a manipulation, every movie in the theater that has a "message", every pep rally in public school is a manipulation. Presidents do it in their speeches and fashion magazine editors in their picture selections.
Everyday people manipulate too. Flirting is a manipulation. Dressing up for an interview is a manipulation.
They are all attempts to control the variables in our environment or to control the people or situations around us.
SO... is it wrong?
There's more: the reason this question even came up is because I have a friend who is so gifted at manipulation that at an unhealthy time in her life, she used it to her own gains and she used it so effectively that the people she did it to did not even realize she had played any part in their decisions.
To her, manipulation takes away a person's choice, their free will. I had never thought of it that way.
Therefore, the question is:
Is manipulating someone moral? AND does manipulation rob someone of their free will?
Manipulation
(definition of manipulate: to handle or control (a tool, mechanism, etc.), typically in a skillful manner)
is different than deception
(definition of deceive: to cause (someone) to believe something that is not true, typically in order to gain some personal advantage).
Manipulation is performed daily: every commercial is a manipulation, every movie in the theater that has a "message", every pep rally in public school is a manipulation. Presidents do it in their speeches and fashion magazine editors in their picture selections.
Everyday people manipulate too. Flirting is a manipulation. Dressing up for an interview is a manipulation.
They are all attempts to control the variables in our environment or to control the people or situations around us.
SO... is it wrong?
There's more: the reason this question even came up is because I have a friend who is so gifted at manipulation that at an unhealthy time in her life, she used it to her own gains and she used it so effectively that the people she did it to did not even realize she had played any part in their decisions.
To her, manipulation takes away a person's choice, their free will. I had never thought of it that way.
Therefore, the question is:
Is manipulating someone moral? AND does manipulation rob someone of their free will?