Self-deception is made unnecessarily puzzling by
the assumption that it is an intrapersonal analog of ordinary
interpersonal deception. In paradigmatic cases, interpersonal
deception is intentional and involves some time at which the
deceiver disbelieves what the deceived believes. The assumption
that self-deception is intentional and that the self-deceiver believes
that some proposition is true while also believing that it is false
produces interesting conceptual puzzles, but it also produces a
fundamentally mistaken view of the dynamics of self-deception.
This target article challenges the assumption and presents an
alternative view of the nature and etiology of self-deception.
Drawing upon empirical studies of cognitive biases, it resolves
familiar “paradoxes” about the dynamics of self-
deception and the condition of being self-deceived. Conceptually
sufficient conditions for self-deception are offered and putative
empirical demonstrations of a kind of self-deception in which a
subject believes that a proposition is true while also believing that
it is false are criticized. Self-deception is neither irresolvably
paradoxical nor mysterious, and it is explicable without the
assistance of mental exotica. The key to understanding its dynamics
is a proper appreciation of our capacity for acquiring and retaining
motivationally biased beliefs.