Jeremy,
I'm sorry, but if you can't accept the normal use of the word "accurately" you have a problem.
Not when the discussion is about the nature of truth I haven’t. Colloquial use of terms is fine when done in a colloquial context, but it fails quickly when the conversation is an epistemological one.
No. Thor making thunder was never true. No amount of people believing it made it true. It doesn't matter how much the people who believed Thor made thunder or how certain they were, they were wrong.
Yes. You’re not getting it. We know
now it was never true because
now we have more a robust explanation for thunder. Thus we can say with some confidence that a statement (“Thor”) that was true once for the people who believed it because it was congruent with the tools and methods available to them can
now be shown to be false. There are also lots of things we think to be true now because they too are congruent with the tools and methods that we have, but that that does not mean though that people 500 years hence using the tools and methods they will have will not find some of those truths to be as false as Thor.
That’s the point. Your confidence about what you think to be true now can be no more certainly true that Thor was certainly true then. Truth is probabilistic, solution verified, malleable as new data and methods emerge – it’s not some sort of universal, out there quantity that we can be certain we have the means to verify.
You are conflating our ability to discover truth about the World with the actual truth about the World.
No I’m not. You’re conflating “the actual truth about the world” with our ability to identify it. All truths are narratives we derive – we don’t have some sort of unmediated access to reality, so we can’t ever be certain about them. “Best fit now” is the best we hope for, for the reasons I’ve explained.