Secret Chief
Veteran Member
That belief was considered to be a fact.I see, so you're using "truth," to mean, "whatever a person or culture believes," regardless of whether the belief is accurate.
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That belief was considered to be a fact.I see, so you're using "truth," to mean, "whatever a person or culture believes," regardless of whether the belief is accurate.
What is reality to us, is subjectively interpreted. What one person calls reality, is not necessarily reality to
another. Examples are countless.
That belief was considered to be a fact.
Did it used to be a fact that the sun orbited the Earth?
Yes.
I see, so you're using "truth," to mean, "whatever a person or culture believes," regardless of whether the belief is accurate.
Yes. But 'truth' is not always fact. For instance, at one time the sun revolving around the earth was the accepted truth. However, this was not factual. As more facts are learned, truth changes.
I know. But it was considered to be a fact. Things are considered to be a fact now. Which of these facts now are actually ...facts?\
Never. However, it was the accepted 'truth' for a time.
Did it used to be a fact that the sun orbited the Earth?
Yes.
Truth never changes...Consciousness is TruthOften, including on RF, I hear people use phrases like, "your truth," "my truth," "true for me," "true for you," and so on.
Is truth individual? Or is it independent of us as individuals?
Exactly! We can only establish truth on what we know. As more knowledge is revealed, truth changes.
I'm sorry, but in the tradition of University Challenge, I'm going to have to accept your first answerSC, I'm sorry, misread your question. No, it was never a fact that the sun orbited the Earth. People believed that, but they were wrong.
Really the question is not which people are correct. The real question is, which perception has more usefulness to the group. What is functionally true for one group, may be completely irrelvant and "untrue" to another.I don't think it's disputed that people disagree about reality. The question is which people are correct about it.
I'm sorry, but in the tradition of University Challenge, I'm going to have to accept your first answer
Really the question is not which people are correct. The real question is, which perception has more usefulness to the group. What is functionally true for one group, may be completely irrelvant and "untrue" to another.
For instance, those that see natural disasters are the result of angry gods, that is a truth for that group. And their system of reality is based around these truths about gods. To someone in modern scientific culture, that is untrue to them. But to those in the magic culture, the scientific view of natural disasters is wrong. Right and wrong, are relative to the group that defines what truth is.
As I said before, it's perceptions all the way up, and all the way down.
I know. But it was considered to be a fact. Things are considered to be a fact now. Which of these facts now are actually ...facts?
I see. In my view, it's not truth that changes, it's just our understanding that does.
Everyone in every group with differing perceptions of reality would agree with this. As I said, it's its functional usefulness to the group. Are your ideas in line with those of the group, or outside of those?The thing is, being correct is vastly more useful than being incorrect.
Yet it did have utility to the group, otherwise the practice would not have continued. While it may not have an effect on the actual weather, it certainly did have an affect on group cohesion. Shared truths and rituals create the experience of reality for its participants.A person who thinks storms are caused by angry gods may waste their time engaging in various sacrifices or other behaviors to appease this supposedly angry deity, when the reality is that has no affect on whether another storm will come.
From the perception of someone inside a magic system, the modernist flying weather balloons and using the tools of modern science is not recognizing the gods, and therefore, angering them puts them at risk. Their approach to reality has benefit to them, and they see no benefit by tossing out the gods, for instance.So they could be using their time to understand what actually causes storms, which is likely to be much more useful to them.
The "Truth" is what is. It is an all-inclusive absolute. There is no "unTruth" except as an antithetical concept in the human mind.Often, including on RF, I hear people use phrases like, "your truth," "my truth," "true for me," "true for you," and so on.
Is truth individual? Or is it independent of us as individuals?
Congratulations! You have discovered your truth,
The "Truth" is what is. It is an all-inclusive absolute. There is no "unTruth" except as an antithetical concept in the human mind.
However, we humans are not capable of ascertaining/comprehending this Truth, as it far excedes our scope of perception and understanding. Such that what we call the "truth" is not the 'Truth'. But is merely our own very limited and biased opinion about what the Truth, is. I am here designating the difference by using a capitalized "T" for the absolute Truth, and a small "t" for the subjective/relative truth as we know perceive it.
It's interesting that we humans are so ego-centric and self-centered that we have not designated two different terms to refer to these two very different conceptual manifestations of "truth".