Hi David Lind, Jon and Elephant:

Your questions about absolute truth show that I�ve failed to make my 
position clear. Let me give it another try.

DAVID
I don't deny that there is an "ultimate truth", I just don't think we can 
access it intellectually. As far as what term we use...doesn't much 
matter me.  Whatever term we come up with seems like an intellectual 
construct and therefore not able to fully embrace whatever absolute 
truth is anyway.

Absolute truth is indeed an intellectual construct as is logic, 
mathematics, science, philosophy and our conversations on this site. 
�Ultimate truth� is also an intellectual concept. But they have different 
meanings. Ultimate truth points to the unknown while absolute truth 
points to the known, i.e. the concept of truth that is implicit in declarative 
statements such as the one you end your posts with, �It�s all good.� By 
absolute truth I�m referring to the truth of A is A, a cat is cat, not a dog, 
you are David, not Goliath.

Platt wrote:
No scientist I know of (or for that matter any human being with a 
modicum of sense) will deny the absolute truth of the Holocaust. Or of 
deaths caused by AIDS. Or the danger of standing on the tracks in front 
of an oncoming train. Life is lived in a sea of absolutes, beginning with 
birth and ending with death.

ELEPHANT:
Yes. Just wondered: Could you possibly read "absolute certainties" for 
"absolute truths"? Your views on what might be at stake here would be 
welcome.

Yes, in the contexts I�ve been using, �absolute truths� means the same 
as �absolute certainties.� My emphasis, however, since this is a site 
about philosophy, has been on the absolute truths required by logic 
and rational discourse. A logical axiom asserts a concept that must be 
used in the process of denying it. For example, one cannot deny 
absolute truth without appealing to absolute truth; one cannot deny 
values without asserting a value. These axioms among others form the 
basis of reason on which philosophy, indeed human life itself, depend. 

JON:
Does my denial of Absolute Truth automatically place me in league 
with the hard-core postmodern people you mentioned? Does it 
automatically make me an immoral person?

I�m not here to judge you or anyone else. We present our views in the 
hope of mutual enlightenment. Nor do I believe in political correctness 
where what one believes, rather than what he does, becomes grounds 
for censure or punishment. But If you were to murder somebody and 
use as a defense �There are no absolute truths� then yes, I would 
consider you immoral. (Your lawyer would, following such a claim, no 
doubt cop a plea of insanity, and rightly so.)

JON:
Platt, you have seen from previous recent posts that I agree with you 
about the dangers of embracing irrationality, and I'm not a 
"postmodernist." You and I both note the growing proliferation of 
immorality in our popular culture and we're both (I assume) slightly 
disturbed by it. You seem to think the leaders of the postmodern 
movement are the cause. I think the cold-hearted Objectivism 
advocated by the works of Ayn Rand has had more of an impact than 
all of the postmodernists put together. Can we find some common 
ground?

On the dangers of embracing irrationality and the proliferation of 
immorality in our culture we are �absolutely� on common ground. (-:  As 
for the cause I think Pirsig puts his finger on it as well as anybody:

PIRSIG:
The Hippie rejection of social and intellectual patterns left just two 
directions to go: toward biological quality and toward Dynamic Quality. 
The revolutionaries of the sixties thought that since both are antisocial, 
and since both are anti-intellectual, why then they must both be the 
same. That was the mistake. (LILA, Chap. 24)

The reason postmodernism is more of threat than Ayn Rand is that the 
former has permeated the humanities in most every U.S. college. 
Rand is personna non grata in academe; you won�t find a course 
devoted to her philosophy in any major liberal arts college. But cultural 
studies, feminist studies, gay studies, African studies�all of which 
cater to the postmodernist dogma of truth dependent on power�are 
everywhere. As such I consider it a far greater danger. 

Platt




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