In a message dated 1/25/2005 4:36:41 PM Pacific Standard Time, k
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I will add to this resend, that you are equating universal object truth with
> external reality. A common mistake.

I'm intrigued.  Since you brought it up, what's the difference?  This
isn't a trap, I really don't know.

cheers,
frank
===========
There are consensual shared truths (families, nations, political parties). 
But not going to get into that.

True:  In accordance with the actual state of affairs. Being that which is 
the case rather than what is manifest or assumed.

Well, some people believe there are hard and fast universal objective truths. 
Right? And some people also feel those truths can be found in external 
reality. That they exist independent of us, just laying out there waiting to be 
discovered.

 My original statement was that we always perceive reality through the filter 
of our own world view, our own experience, our own lens -- whatever you want 
to call it. 

How can we not? We are inside ourselves, looking out.

So how do you know what's true? What's a universal objective truth out there 
in reality? Are you sure? Or is it something someone else told you? Let's take 
scientific truths. Don't they change all the time? Isn't that what someone 
else told you? (Or did you do experiments in the lab to prove it? :-)) And 
don't 
scientists disagree all the time? And, even now, don't they not know how some 
basic things work? So what is scientific truth?

Take political truth -- George Bush, I think he is the worst President, the 
worst thing to happen to the US in my life time. Others thing he is an okay 
guy. I also think, no, he isn't our President, that he only apparently won by 
fraud and lying, but he didn't actually win (in the previous election). Others 
think he did win.

What's true, what I believe, or what they believe?

If you think there are hard and fast truths out there that you can discover, 
you believe there are some immutable facts. You believe that things don't 
change. That our perception of them doesn't change. That cultures doesn't 
change 
truths. That science doesn't change truths. That we don't change truths 
sometimes just by our very existence, and our investigations.

Assuming we can perceive reality untainted by our own perspective is rather 
presumptuous. IMHO.

We are not "god like" with the ability to be totally impassive. To stand 
outside ourselves.

And I can't explain it any better than that. And I don't want to. That's it.

I also said, I don't believe we have discovered the nature of reality yet.

As a postscript -- debating rules are silly, because they have a person take 
one side and another person take another side. And somehow by debating, the 
"truth" is supposed to emerge. When maybe to the person on one side, that is 
their truth, and to the person on the other side, that is their "truth." No 
amount of arguing is going to change that. Debating doesn't arrive at truths, 
it 
just sometimes arrives at a winner and loser (if both sides agree to abide by 
debating rules). The winner is just the most persistent and articulate. See, 
there is a presumption that by arguing, one side will see the logic of the 
other 
side, and "give way." But maybe both sides firmly believe what they believe. 
And maybe what they are arguing are opinions, beliefs, and there is no point 
arguing those. Unless you want flame wars. And maybe both sides will never 
"give 
way."

Debating rules also don't really allow for humor, they encourage 
straightlaced black and white thinking, allow for no tangents, don't allow for 
changing 
viewpoints, and I think were designed by men for men. ;-) They are a formalized 
way to manage verbal aggression. 

Sometimes we just have to agree to disagree.

I don't think I said it as well as I could have, but I have to run and make 
Mom her dinner. 

If someone wants to debate it, find someone else who likes that kind of thing.

I don't. :-)

Marnie 

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