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- logic - What is the difference between Fact and Truth? - Philosophy . . .
Truth is what the singer gives to the listener when she’s brave enough to open up and sing from her heart But still curious about the difference between both of them In our daily life, in general conversation, we generally use these both terms interchangeably Then what is the difference? Are they synonym or have specific difference?
- How Exactly Do You Define Truth? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
In summary truth emerges only after more thorough philosophy is gained, from East to West everyone has their own intuitive idiosyncratic notion of truth, thus its nature is highly dependent on ones' entire metaphysical or epistemic system
- truth - What is opinion? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
It is commonly agreed that there is a clear distinction between fact and opinion Physical facts can be verified Opinion varies and may be based on faith But what about opinions which, over time,
- Does truth exist without proof? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
Truth-value realism is the view that every well-formed mathematical statement has a unique and objective truth-value that is independent of whether it can be known by us and whether it follows logically from our current mathematical theories
- Can truth exist without language? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
4 "Whether truth can exist without language" and "that truth is an objective reality that exists independently of us" are not opposed claims, although they don't imply one another A Platonist would tell you that language, like other mental objects, exists in the ideal realm whether people are around to think about it or not
- truth - What is the difference between not true and false . . .
Truth is a condition of statements (utterances, propositions, sentences, and such - see chapter 9 of John R Searle's "The Construction of Social Reality") This condition is satisfied when utterance matches (fits, corresponds to ) what is (the case, the world, states of affairs, et cetera
- truth - Is perspectivism a subtype of relativism? - Philosophy Stack . . .
Relativism is the doctrine that knowledge, truth, and morality exist in relation to culture, society, or historical context, and are not absolute Perspectivism is the theory that knowledge of a subject is inevitably partial and limited by the individual perspective from which it is viewed
- logic - The absolute truth paradox - Philosophy Stack Exchange
"There is no absolute truth because we as humans are restrained from ever knowing it" is fallacious, what humans can know imposes no restriction on what is And "this" will only be a way out of the paradox after it specifies which axioms of classical logic are supposed to be dropped, and shows that what is left is enough and otherwise reasonable There are several options described in standard
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