PureX
Well-known member
What part of "actually is true" does't apply to my criteria of an idea "working" in actual life application?I think that I tend to have more interest in what actually is true than in a comforting illusion.
Maybe you don't have that much intention of putting a perceived truth to the test if an illusion feels good enough…?
How is what works not what's "actually true"? You have never explained this. Or how you can know that it's not actually true even though it actually works.It's your life, just do what seems to work then.
When you claim that something is (almost certainly) untrue even though believing it's true actually works for millions of people, you are responsible for backing up your claim. I, on the other hand, have not claimed that what I believe is true (or even almost certainly true), but only that my choosing to believe that it's true works for me, and that it seems to work for many millions of other human beings. I am not postulating any truth-claims, I'm only pointing out observed and observable facts. So, the onus is on you.Nonsense, you can't shift the burden of proof that way. If I claim that you owe me a million dollars then would it be your job to show me that you didn't or mine to show that you do?
Then it works for me but not for you. And there are a number of reasons why that might be so. But the fact that it is so does not support the contention that the idea is "untrue". It supports the contention that the idea can be misunderstood, and/or misapplied.What if it works for you but not for me, are there two truths or is it that you just don't care what is true so long as it works well enough?
How similar is "similar"?Well, if we both independently went to the Grand Canyon (say) then we can both experience it in a similar way, right?
You really do let yourself get caught up this idea of same/similar/different as some sort of pathway to truth. And it's just not. Everything is similar to everything else. And everything is different from everything else. So the concept of similarity/difference is a relative concept. Which means that both are true simultaneously; and it just depends upon context/perspective which represents our position at any given place in time, and in any given context.
Everyone's experience of the Grand Canyon is different. Everyone's experience of the Grand Canyon is the same. And everyone's experience of the Grand Canyon is unique. That's the paradox of Truth. It's bigger than we are, so to us, it becomes relative, and therefor it often becomes paradoxical.
Well, that's just another way of saying that you're letting your bias toward skepticism own you to the point of being irrational.Assume away then but I simply assume something doesn't exist until I am reasonably convinced otherwise.
Yet, you do spend inordinate amounts of time on this one. So why not set aside your bias and explore it reasonably and fully?There are just too many spurious and vacuous claims around for me to try to work them all out.
Your own brain is giving you ample proof that it is generating an imaginary conceptual universe that you perceive as "reality". And that even the idea of truth, itself, is a part of that conceptual universe. So not only do you have proof, but this proof is so omnipresent to your human experience that you apparently are having trouble recognizing it at all … sort of like a fish might have trouble recognizing water. There is no 'onus of proof' on me, because I'm merely pointing out something that for we humans is self-evident. Or ought to be, if we are relatively intelligent.For me one of the apparent physical functions of the brain involves an otherwise metaphysical thought process. I see no reason why such imaginings should be going on somewhere else outside the brain, while you haven't even begun to show how it could be so, therefore I don't see that the onus is mine to show that it isn't, I just assume that it isn't.
Because we are all living in our own conceptual reality. And because "objective truth" is a concept existing within that reality, the truth, for us, remains both subjective, and therefor relative. We cannot escape this. That "objective reality" that you imagine to be the truth 'apart from you' is itself a concept that you are generating within your own mind. And is itself therefor both relative and subjective to your own mind.Doesn't all that rather subjectively depend on what is deemed to "work" rather than what is true?
Once again, we encounter that paradoxical nature of "truth".
The real truth includes our faulty perceptions, misunderstandings, and idealizations. It does not exist "independent of" or "apart from" them, as our limited concept of it leads some of us to imagine.The real truth doesn't care about our faulty perceptions of it since it is surely independent of human subjectivity.
There is no "truth" without our conceiving of it. There is only inconceivable being. (Sounds like a definition of "God", doesn't it?)It will still be the truth regardless of what we might like to think it is, because it is.
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