What evidence of truth do you need to except a clam, be it moral, religious, philosophical, ect. Do you distinguish between these, if so why and how There are no new truths, but only truths that have not been recognized by those who have perceived them without noticing. A truth is something that everybody can be shown to know and to have known, as people say, all along, Mary McCarthy. I believe that someone can recognize the truth without having physical evidence to prove it, just by their intuition. In a case where there is not physical evidence to support a claim, the only evidence would then be logic. Take Zeno s Paradoxes for example.
The idea that movement does not occur and that our senses are unreliable seems absurd to me. Even though I can not prove it to be false, I can not except it even with the evidence presented. It is obviously ridiculous because it offends either our reason or our common sense. However, I can not prove my senses to be accurate, but I do rely on them the majority of the time.
I believe it is a natural truth. When a claim is logical and I am able to relate a reasonable effect to the cause, I can ponder its truth. The question I believe a philosopher would ask is – how would someone discern between a natural truth and a learned truth. A learned truth being something tought and excepted without question, for example – many people believed that the world is flat, or in the case of religion, there is a God. This would be very difficult in moral claims.
The Essay on Evident Truths Russell Questions Sense
Of course it is not by argument that we originally come by our belief in an independent external world. We find this belief ready in ourselves as soon as we begin to reflect: it is what may be called an instinctive belief. We should never have been led to question this belief but for the fact that, at any rate in the case of sight, it seems as if the sense-datum itself were instinctively believed ...
For example, how would you punish someone accused of murder In some cultures just the accusation is cause for execution, an eye for an eye. In others, even if there is proof that convicts that person they believe that all life is sacred. Still in others, it depends on how much of a defense you can afford and how good the lawyers are. I believe that justice is a learned truth and any moral claim could be misleading due to the fact tha people believe their morals to be natural truths (knowledge) and are not likely to question them.
Religious claims are the most interesting to me. Unfortunately, one does not have solid physical evidence until they die. However, regardless of this, people find such strong convictions in their religious claims that they devote their entire life in every aspect to it. I personally have not found a religion that fulfills my purpose of being.
I do consider all claims that follow the logical guidelines I have already stated. Philosophical claims tend to be closely related to religious claims in the fact that culture dilutes the truth. I am open to the possibility that there is more that one universal answer to the timeless questions. Does my life have a purpose How should I live my life Is truth relative The answers that I find true in my search may not be relative to a life half way across the world. What evidence of truth do you need to except a clam, be it moral, religious, philosophical, ect. Do you distinguish between these, if so why and how There are no new truths, but only truths that have not been recognized by those who have perceived them without noticing.
A truth is something that everybody can be shown to know and to have known, as people say, all along, Mary McCarthy. I believe that someone can recognize the truth without having physical evidence to prove it, just by their intuition. In a case where there is not physical evidence to support a claim, the only evidence would then be logic. Take Zeno s Paradoxes for example.
The Essay on A Way of Life for Searching People
The book Practicing Our Faith: a Way of Life for a Searching People is about addressing the need for sharing the fundamental needs of man to establish faithful and honorable Christian way of life. It explores twelve central Christian practices contributed together by thirteen individuals coming from diverse denominational and ethnic backgrounds. Specifically this book provides significance to ...
The idea that movement does not occur and that our senses are unreliable seems absurd to me. Even though I can not prove it to be false, I can not except it even with the evidence presented. It is obviously ridiculous because it offends either our reason or our common sense. However, I can not prove my senses to be accurate, but I do rely on them the majority of the time. I believe it is a natural truth.
When a claim is logical and I am able to relate a reasonable effect to the cause, I can ponder its truth. The question I believe a philosopher would ask is – how would someone discern between a natural truth and a learned truth. A learned truth being something tought and excepted without question, for example – many people believed that the world is flat, or in the case of religion, there is a God. This would be very difficult in moral claims. For example, how would you punish someone accused of murder In some cultures just the accusation is cause for execution, an eye for an eye. In others, even if there is proof that convicts that person they believe that all life is sacred.
Still in others, it depends on how much of a defense you can afford and how good the lawyers are. I believe that justice is a learned truth and any moral claim could be misleading due to the fact that people believe their morals to be natural truths (knowledge) and are not likely to question them. Religious claims are the most interesting to me. Unfortunately, one does not have solid physical evidence until they die. However, regardless of this, people find such strong convictions in their religious claims that they devote their entire life in every aspect to it. I personally have not found a religion that fulfills my purpose of being.
I do consider all claims that follow the logical guidelines I have already stated. Philosophical claims tend to be closely related to religious claims in the fact that culture dilutes the truth. I am open to the possibility that there is more that one universal answer to the timeless questions. Does my life have a purpose How should I live my life Is truth relative The answers that I find true in my search may not be relative to a life half way across the world.
The Essay on Sacred Place Life Religion Religious
People are religious for many reasons. These include the difference religion makes in life and how religious beliefs influence actions. Religion structures a religious person's life. More than three quarters of the world's population consider they belong to a religion. All aspects of religion are reasons for a person to be religious. For some, the difference that sacred places, books, prayer and ...