Today & Tomorrow
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Philip Wik




Truth and Fact

 

         While all facts are true, it doesn’t follow that are truths are fact.   For example, consider these three statements:

               

1.      This book weighs two pounds.

2.      No two snowflakes are the same.

3.      Two plus two equals four.

4.      Jesus will save you from your sins.

 

Are these all facts?

         I would say that the first proposition is either true or false. If it is true, then we call it a fact.  Everyone, no matter what their beliefs, must come to the same conclusion based on the available evidence, in this case, a scale that weighs the book.  “A false balance is an abomination to the Lord,” says Proverbs 11:1.  “But a just weight is His delight.”  In defending the veracity of objective measurement, the Talmud required that merchants wipe their scales every two weeks, their weight every week, and the pan after every weighing.    The one caveat I would make is that it is a mistake to suppose that facts by themselves are value neutral.  The selection of those facts and the criteria of what constitutes evidence all involve judgment and, in some cases, competing ethical claims.  I think it is possible for a “false fact” to exist, as in the case when we are dreaming that we have determined that the book weighs two pounds.  Thus, there are predicating assumptions to determining facts, such as the state of our consciousness and whether or not the proposition is amendable to some kind of an accurate third party evaluation.

         The second statement is a high probability, not a fact.  We cannot state with absolute certainty that this proposition is either true or false.  There are, after all, a lot of snowflakes and we accept as a given that no two roses are alike.  There is, of course, a question as to what we mean be the word "same".       

         The third statement isn’t a fact.  It’s a deduction based on a closed system of axiomatic mathematics.  This will raise protests from every kid in kindergarten.  Can’t you see, they argue, that if you put together two beads and two more beads, you get four beads?  I must agree with them but only because we share an understanding of such words as “two”, “four” and “put together.”   Equations are symbols that represent reality.  The underlying reality doesn’t change, although the notation may change, from base ten, say, to base eleven.  The epistemological problem is that we don’t know what that reality is unless we make certain quantitative predicating assumptions, which are not facts.  However, it’s incorrect to say that axioms are expressions of faith or belief.  They are rather unprovable self-evident truths.  An example is the parallel postulate of geometry that “through a point not on a given line, one, and only one line may be drawn that is parallel to the given line.”   An alternative non-Euclidean postulate will yield different but truthful deductions. 

          I believe the fourth sentence is true but it is not a fact.  I cannot demonstrate it to a Chinese atheist or to a Chinese Christian for that matter in the same way that I can demonstrate the weight of my book.  It is a statement of belief.  Neither doubt nor belief are in themselves either true or false.  We can demonstrate this by changing the third proposition to this statement:  !@# will save you from your sins.”   We have no basis for evaluating the truth or falsehood of this statement.  We cannot say it is true or false, and nor can we suspend judgment in the absence of information, as there is nothing to judge and no information to get.  The word “Jesus” is also a symbol but our culture fills with content.   But I’m not sure that a symbol that is devoid of content is any more or less meaningful than a symbol that cannot be evaluated.  While I think many or most religious statements fall into this category, I cannot say that all such statements are nonsense or meaningless.  Some people may invoke other utilitarian, mystical, or existential criterion that justifies for them their belief in these statements.

         Sometimes, the truth is more important than facts and sometimes facts have little or nothing to do with truth.   I think, for these reasons, we need to speak or write with care when we use such words as “prove” and “fact”.  These words have narrow meanings that doesn’t necessarily equate to validity or truth.   

       How do we know the Bible is the Word of God?  The usual answer is: because the Bible says so; it authenticates itself.  Such circularity, however, does little to advance the compelling claims that are in the Bible.  Nor can we rely on the sincerity or ability of the expositor, as there are dishonest theists and honest atheists as well theists that contradict each other, as in the case of end-times events.  We cannot rely on the simple meaning of words, as many words have multiple or poetic meanings, or meanings that change over time.  There are also many words that have become dogma that are not in the Bible.  I search in vain for trinity and rapture as well as attributes of God such as omniscient and omnipresent.  That is not to say that these are not valid truths, but it is up to you to find for yourself that what preachers say is true, to really think things through to separate what is true from what is false, the wheat from the chaff.  I think archaeological discoveries, fulfilled prophecies, and miracles are never by themselves sufficient to substantiate the Bible, although they can provide context and greater understanding.  I consider conversion experiences to be worthless as validation for belief.  Such experiences are common to all political and religious faiths, and are all equally unreliable.         

     Thinking is hard work, especially when you think for yourself.  And, as T.S. Eliot wrote, we may return to where we started-- what we find through years of study might indeed be what we lisped as children in Sunday school, but it must be up to us to start that exploration.       

 

We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of all our exploring

Will be to arrive where we started

And know the place for the first time.

 



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