I do not believe in facts nor do I believe in good or bad. I do not believe that we truly know anything. — Plex
Facts are only an ideal perfection, something we would like to achieve but cannot. — Plex
I do not believe in facts nor do I believe in good or bad. I do not believe that we truly know anything. Facts are only an ideal perfection, something we would like to achieve but cannot. — Plex
In science, "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional assent." — Stephen J Gould
I do not believe in facts nor do I believe in good or bad. I do not believe that we truly know anything. — Plex
Is the value not found in the question rather than the answer? — Plex
Why not learn more about a certain subject by asking more questions? — Plex
I do not believe in answers, I do not believe in good or bad — Plex
Am I wrong (if you believe in the existence of wrong)? — Plex
Are you able to name a fact and if yes how do you know completely certain there is one? — Plex
Yes, truly I do not.Including this? — creativesoul
So... then are you saying that it's not bad to smack an old lady in the head with a shovel, or to kick puppies, or to knowingly and deliberately cause unnecessary harm?
Do you know that you do not believe in good and bad? — creativesoul
Here’s what Steven J Gould had to say about facts:
In science, "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional assent."
— Stephen J Gould — T Clark
What it means for something to be unknown and how not the knowing, but the unknowing is where the fruits of life can be found. — Plex
It's s fact that these marks on this page are words. I know it for certain since I wrote some of them, they're published and open to read. — jkop
there will always be more questions to ask, and more to think about. — Patterner
Also known as 'nonsense'. — Wayfarer
I do not believe that we truly know anything. — Plex
There is no complete certainty, we round the numbers of reality by decimals. Trying to know as much as possible but never can every degree of accuracy be defined. It is simply infinity. Like the title says: "Facts, the ideal illusion". It is an ideal scenario to know things as facts, but calling it facts is the illusion many people tend to base their reality on. — Plex
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