I consider a lie to be "knowingly saying something untrue;" so no, I wouldn't consider breaking a promise to be a lie.SpoilerI also have difficulty telling lies outside of obvious sarcastic remarks and jokes. Unless it's life or death or something that could substantially affect my life (basically self-preservation), I never lie.
I believe your intention determines whether it's a lie or not. If you promise to be to a friend's house at a certain time and on your way there you get hit by a semi and put in the hospital, it's not your fault you broke the promise.
I'd say it counts if you can answer yes to the following questions. Did you know you would not be able to fulfill the promise prior to making it?Did you purposefully set up events to prevent you from fulfilling the promise?Are you lying or creating excuses to get out of fulfilling the promise?Did you have zero interest in upholding the promise from the start?
It's already been determined, and you're making a claim with a truth value about it. If you're wrong, your statement is false, therefore untrue, therefore a lie.
Quote from: Sly Instinct on February 16, 2015, 08:30:32 PMI believe your intention determines whether it's a lie or not. If you promise to be to a friend's house at a certain time and on your way there you get hit by a semi and put in the hospital, it's not your fault you broke the promise.There comes the tricky part, huh. How do you convince someone of your original intentions? You can't, really. Some people get so angry at you over the broken promise that they don't even care about the circumstances.
When you say, "it's not your fault you broke the promise," I would opt to say instead, "it's not your fault the promise was broken."