Teaching Newtonian Mechanics to students is also a lie. But I don't believe starting with General Relativity is going to do anything but confuse students.
I was never confused by "3 baskets of 6 apples, how many apples" questions or thought I'd been lied to about addition.
> Teaching Newtonian Mechanics to students is also a lie.
Not if you tell the students that it's an approximate model that works well in the domain they're currently studying, but doesn't work well in a more expanded domain.
Of course if you insist on acting like an authority and telling students that Newtonian Mechanics is "the Truth", then yes, you are lying to them. But you don't have to tell them that to teach them Newtonian Mechanics.
> Of course if you insist on acting like an authority and telling students that Newtonian Mechanics is "the Truth", then yes, you are lying to them. But you don't have to tell them that to teach them Newtonian Mechanics.
Do you think teachers really say "Newtonian Mechanics is the Truth" in class? Maybe it's different in the US but in Australia I've never had an interaction with a teacher like that.
Or is your issue that teachers are omitting that information? If so, that's quite a different thing to discuss.
I was never confused by "3 baskets of 6 apples, how many apples" questions or thought I'd been lied to about addition.