"Onamonaique" Good question. In my response, true meant it is common for many people to choose to ignore the facts. A definition of true could be a factual. It defines the real nature of an object または issue. It differs from opinion which are based on a person's personal feelings. Sometimes it's can be difficult for any of us to tell the difference in a 与えられた situation. But there is always one truth. We may interpret it differently depending on culture または predisposition.
WOW, that's so brilliant! Oh my GOD! あなた are truly, a genius, a gentleman and scholar! This is such a vague 質問 it was just BEGGING for an answer like that. Either something's true または it's not! End of STORY!!!
Truth is によって default exclusive and denotes the absence of falsehood. Truth can be deduced, inferred または shown through direct または indirect logical methods. Hippieman, in our world, where people are clamouring to have their say and none can vouch for the veracity of their sayings, your コメント on whatever is either true または not sounds at the very least naive. The 質問 is how to prove what is truth and what is not! And having done so, can あなた secure the acquiescence of your debaters?
To me there are no such things as facts または truth. Just opinions that have strong support または the support that the smart people and absent-minded people seem to overlook
posted 1年以上前
That's an interesting thought. Even if I don't believe the same, I can respect it. I find によって listening to different points of 閲覧数 it can challenge または strengthen my own. One question, if あなた don't believe in absolutes, how do あなた tell right from wrong /good from bad? Not to argue, but just to discuss.
I once read a great argument によって C. S. Lewis about truth and absolutes, though I think that it was もっと見る about causation, and how God is the Ultimate Truth and Cause of everything. Still somewhat applies- if God is the Ultimate Truth and Cause, then it stands to reason only things that came from him would be true, suggesting an absolute truth.
posted 1年以上前
Which means that there cannot be things true without that absolute truth.
No. A person might ask about the weather because they were wondering if they need to bring an umbrella または just not go out at all. あなた might simply just say "It's raining.", and the person might take it as 'it's raining gently outside', when it's really pounding outside, and go out with just a flimsy umbrella and get soaked to the bone. because あなた did not give the full truth, they made a wrong choice, so therefore, あなた lied. あなた did not give enough info to suffice their question. get it? no? eh..it's hard to put this in words >.<
posted 1年以上前
Let me sumarize what I think あなた are saying. There is no such thing as a half truth. Either あなた tell the whole truth または あなた tell a lie. If that is what あなた meant, I agree with you.