From reading the comments: isn't science a form of truth? The idea of a systematic process of evaluating facts that are measurable with a high degree of accuracy is a process where the limit approaches some truthiness. What's fascinating is that quantum mechanics, the edge of our measurable abilities, is governed by probability. Is truth, at its most accurate form, inexact because of this process governed by probability?
WrinklyTidbits t1_jbi5vkq wrote
Reply to There is nothing to say about truth, admits Simon Blackburn. Here he presents the deflationist approach to truth – one that aims to put an end to the search for a theory of truth, which Blackburn now recognises is futile by IAI_Admin
From reading the comments: isn't science a form of truth? The idea of a systematic process of evaluating facts that are measurable with a high degree of accuracy is a process where the limit approaches some truthiness. What's fascinating is that quantum mechanics, the edge of our measurable abilities, is governed by probability. Is truth, at its most accurate form, inexact because of this process governed by probability?