SoTS,
For example
• Truth is not affected by what one says about it
• Truth doesn't stop being truth because someone finds it hard to believe
• Truth doesn't stop being truth because it is hard to prove
• For a given truth claim X, you can aim to show that X is true or that anything that contradicts X is false.
• For a given truth claim X, you can aim to show that X is false or show that something that contradicts X is true.
What odd notions you hold. Does it really not occur to you that the truth is axiomatically impossible to know? Why? Because absolute certainty would require knowledge of everything there is so as to be sure that the universe does not hold information that could falsify our beliefs.
What that means is that truth is
probabilistic – we use the tools and methods available to edge toward working models of it, but we cannot have epistemic certainty.
And what
that means is that, when we can apply these tools and methods we can establish functional truths and use them to create solutions – aeroplanes and medicines for example. When we don’t have them though – as with claims of “god” for example – all we have is guessing. And the trouble with guesses is that they are epistemically the same – god, leprechauns, whatever. Accept one and you have no choice but to accept all of them.
And that old son is what all religious faith is “blind”.
You’re welcome.