In the absence of understanding people resort to beliefs. — 4thClassCitizen
I think, we are in principle never going to be in a position to see the answer to our question. — InfiniteZero
That is actually not true. For example the question - "What does it mean to mean?" Already speaks from a perspective from which the answer is knowable at least in the form of "That's what it is". If you wish to discuss that particular question, or a few other questions that relate to this topic, consider going to the following thread: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/3980/what-prevents-us-from-seeingknowing-the-truth - You may also discuss that question here.The question is asked from a position that demands an answer that does not and cannot exist in the same position the question was asked from. — InfiniteZero
Yes... new answers do aid in seeing the world from a different perspective. But then ... so do questions - A question you are trying to answer might just force you to move somewhere where you are not - or maybe you don´t even need to try to answer it in order to move away. Do you think that is simply because questions already provide a base of presuppositions we end up standing on?I think the means is learning because by gaining more knowledge we inevitably expand our beliefs. — BrianW
I think you've got a good topic here - at least as I read it. — tim wood
Is there any forceful idea that leads, pushes, and guides to a greater and more comprehensive world-view? — tim wood
But you need at least the experience of thinking/feeling (I have yet to know wether there is true difference between the two) how it would be like to walk on the moon before you activelly talk about it.it is not necessary to have experiences of walking on the moon in order to be allowed or able to talk about it. — jkop
don't you already know what people mean when they say that something exists? — SophistiCat
I agree that such is the convention. But what do those who use and defend the convention mean when they say that something exists?If pretty much everyone, as appears to be the case, already uses the word "exist" so that it applies to things that do not have a clear location, then what's the point of this exercise? — SophistiCat
? All I am attempting to defend is the view point that for anything to exist, then it must exist in the same way as tables do. I am therefore arguing towards the non-existance of truth . You seem to be doing the same when you state thattruth exists in the same way that tables do — intrapersona
. I would say that about true propositions, not about truth. There is a true proposition which tells you the number of stars in this Universe. But does the truth about the number of stars in the Universe exist? Where would lay bare such a truth?truth can only exist within the mind — intrapersona