QUOTE(Yelekiah @ Dec 1 2005, 11:53 PM) [snapback]958010[/snapback]
Some "truths" can be proven through science.
Before I get to the quoted text, I have something to say: I have studied or thought over perception in and out. I am not an expert on it simply because there is no one but myself that can give myself the previously mentioned title. Please bear with me as I list a collective of observations I have made thus far, displayed hopefully objectively. [I will defend them if need be. Also note I make "contradictions"]:
- Absolutes do not exist in any way, shape, or form.
- Any truth is a whole and since it is truth, an absolute.
- Good and Evil are two arms of the three in an
absolutely subjective existance.
- Anything can be percieved in any way.
- No one perception, opinion, or judgement is absolute or truth.
These may sound absurd but I have a wealth of reason behind them. If you are curious, I would love to debate or discuss with you.
Now to the quote. I am aware that you [Yelekiah] put Truths within quotations. Instead of picking up a debate with you I will simply make a statement. A "truth" can never be proven. If something could be proven 100% with zero chance of it being wrong we would not be where we are today. The world can be percieved through any number of colors or metaphors. But, playing on the common one, Truth is not simply black or bhite. It is black and white. If truth was only one terminal of the spectrum or metaphor, it could be 100% proven. It is not, since a 100% can be considered an absolute and/or perfection and neither exist. A truth can only be proven 99.9% repeating, with the probability of it being incorrect a minimum of .x1% [x standing for the assigned number of zeros before 1]
A simple logic I have come up with is the following: Because infinity exists and because truth is subjective, there is infinite possibility. Truth can be and cannot be both right and wrong, black and white, or any other possible or impossible metaphor, adjective, or feeling attached with it. This contradiction is not a contradiction at all. It is a
paradox.Sound absurd? Great.