Truth, truthful, truthy

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absentia
Truth, truthful, truthy

How hard is it to "write the truth"?

In a novel i've been reading, the narrator says, near the beginning, that he can't write the truth, because it keeps changing; he doesn't trust his memory.

There may be many other reasons why telling the truth is difficult, and it may be more difficult about some subjects than others. Can we even know with any degree of certainty whether we're telling the truth?

 

Glenl

Truth is relative to our reality, if we sincerely believe it, it becomes the truth. I had a dog that was afraid of thunder. One day sitting outside in Regina a hot air balloon drifted overhead quite low. My dog and I both noticed it. Just then the pilot hit the thruster and the noise sounded like thunder. My dog took off and hid in the basement. Every time she seen a hot air ballon after that she did the same. She knew where thunder came from. She was right of course.

Unionist

Glenl wrote:
Truth is relative to our reality, if we sincerely believe it, it becomes the truth.

Religion and similar forms of faith (chauvinism, xenophobia, homophobia, misogyny, etc.) operate in reverse. The truth is established first, then reality is determined relative to "our truth". If we sincerely believe it, it becomes real.

 

absentia

If i sincerely believe that the earth is flat, it's true for me. It looks right, feels right; this is how i experience the earth. But then somebody convinces me that the evidence of my senses is incorrect, and that, from a greater perspective than my own, the earth can be proven to be round. Then, round earth becomes my intellectual truth, while flat earth is still my physical reality. I can sincerely believe both, but objective fact and subjective experience are now two different stories.

 

Caissa

My academic background is in history. Part of an historian's job is to attempt to understand what happened and why. Even establishing that sort of "truth" is difficult.