Submitted by MitchTobol on

Truth

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Lifestyle

Fred's blog a week ago inspired quite a bit of comments. Some of them were very passionate about their beliefs on current events. This caused me to think about truth and what it really means. I've learned that there can be two types of truth...empircal and convenient.

 

Empirical truth is based on evidence, research and reason. It is the truth that scientists seek. It is the truth that people seek when they want to achieve predictable results.

 

Empirical truth is hard to establish and can be inconvenient when it does not serve an immediate need. Politicians and other persuaders love it when it buttresses their policies, but they hate it when such truths point the other way.

Convenient truth is based on need, desire and emotion. It is the truth that deceivers seek. It is the truth that people seek when they want to be right when they suspect they are wrong. In relation to time, convenient truth is about now and worries little about the past or future.

 

Convenient truth is the truth of populist politicians and journalists, who seek to persuade without worrying too much about empirical truth. Convenient truth is established through confident repetition, assertion and sheer power.

 

I find it alarming and fascinating that all of us, no matter what your belief or background, tend to accept convenient truths as emperical.

 

When listening for truth, perhaps the best we can do is be cautious.

Comments

Fred Klein

Nothing is as it appears. Up is down and down is up!
Norman Spizz

There are three sides to every story. Yours, mine and the truth.
Corey Bearak

The so-called convenient is nothing less than an untruth and falsehood.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ml5K4BgrcaQ&list=PLICBESq3Xd0GKWuLOIQFMB-fMumUO39Ae&index=10

https://youtu.be/UaiGABTj0aA

Submitted by VincentPetraro on Sat, 01/11/2020 - 01:19

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Vincent Petraro

Very good point. A very clear example of this happened just short of a year ago when Nick Sandmann and his peers were bullied by activists and then shamed by most of the media. The convenient truth, pushed by the so-caled journalists, was that this pro-life, high school student, with a MAGA cap on, and his peers started the trouble. The media didn't care about evidence, research or reason. Luckily for Sandmann and the rest, there were those that videoed the entire event and then, and only then, the truth came out. Now CNN has settled with Sandmann, with other sloppy (I am being nice characterizing them as sloppy) media outlets sure to follow suit. Thanks goodness, truth, empirical truth, won out over convenient truth!
Rona Gura

100% agree. In my business we say there's the plaintiff's truth and the defendant's truth. But the real truth rests somewhere in between.
Paul Napolitano

Good job Vincent. Fortunately, “Empirical” truth usually comes out in the long run.

Submitted by VincentPetraro on Sat, 01/11/2020 - 02:44

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Vincent Petraro

Interestingly, the below survey just came out about misinformed voters:

https://www.justfacts.com/news_2019_survey_voter_knowledge.asp#results
Paul Napolitano

My physical chemistry professor used to tell me to never confuse empirical data with statistics. You can make statistics prove any “truth” you want. He would quote Mark Twain "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics."

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Sat, 01/11/2020 - 22:59

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Marilyn Genoa

Wonderful blog—on so many levels.

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