Bell's Theorem I am increasingly thinking of 'truth' as a misleading and undefinable concept. For one thing, just because some statement are true, that does not provide a reason for postulating that there is a meaningful abstract noun 'truth'. 'True' is (at most) a predicate, an adjective modifying the proposition being discussed - making it a noun is simple reification. Defining 'truth' only creates a 'thing' that we can argue about. We can instead ask 'What does it mean for a proposition to be true?'. Secondly, in science, 'truth' was replaced by 'certainty' by Descartes, which was later replaced by 'confidence', reflecting the lack of total certainty of anything other than that, updating Descartes, 'there is thinking, therefore there is thinking'. Describing something as 8 ft long means that we expect, with 95% confidence, that the length of the 2x4 is between 8 - delta and 8 + delta feet long, where delta is situation specific, and can be either explicit or specified.
Interesting discussion of how we characterise objects in 'Women, Fire and Dangerous Things' by Lakoff. A tree is recognised as a tree because it is similar to objects that have been previously characterised as trees.