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Absolute Truth and the Relativity of Truth
Are there absolute truths or is truth relative? A review of the philosophical concept of truth and an extended discussion of the movie, "Rashomon", to see if the question is even understandable. -- 5,145 words; MLA

The Truth About Truth
A philosophical look at the meaning of truth. -- 1,401 words; MLA

Pilate as the Antithesis of Truth in Bacon’s “Of Truth”
This paper discusses the essay "Of Truth" by Francis Bacon, looking primarily at the character of Pilate. -- 536 words; MLA

Concepts of Relativity and Truth: Finding Your Own Truth
A discussion of Nietzsche's belief on deconstructing truth and the concept of relativism in terms of other thinkers. -- 793 words;

What Is Truth?
Questions the meaning of truth, using Felipe Fernandez-Armesto's book "Truth: a History and a Guide for the Perplexed". -- 1,400 words;

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TRUTH

There are three ways in which one is able to find truth: through reason (A is A), by
utilizing the senses (paper burns) or by faith (God is all loving). As the period of the
Renaissance came to a close, the popular paradigm for philosophers shifted from faith to
reason and finally settling on the senses. Thinkers began to challenge authorities,
including great teachers such as Aristotle and Plato, and through skepticism the modern
world began. The French philosopher, Rene Descartes who implemented reason to find truth,
as well as the British empiricist David Hume with his usage of analytic-synthetic
distinction, most effectively utilized the practices of skepticism in the modern world.
Rene Descartes was the first philosopher to introduce the intellectual system known as
"radical doubt." According to Descartes, everything he had learned before could have
possibly been tainted by society or the senses, therefore he began "...to tear down the
edifice of knowledge and rebuild it from the foundations up" (Palmer 157). It was not
that everything necessarily had to be false, but physical laws could not offer absolute
certainty. Therefore Descartes used reason alone as his tool towards gaining absolute
truth; truth being something that one could not possibly doubt. In his conclusion,
Descartes found that the only thing that holds absolutely true is his existence. His
famous quote, "Cogito ergo sum" can be translated into "I think, therefore I am." By this
Descartes implied that when you doubt, someone is doubting, and you cannot doubt that you
are. With this revelation, the French philosopher continued to define selfhood as his
consciousness. For in Descartes terms, it was plausible to doubt that one has a body, but
impossible to doubt the existence of one's mind; therefore "...self and mind must be
identical" (Palmer 162).
Hume on the other hand, took a different approach to the idea of self. He believed that
there in fact was no such thing as selfhood. Instead he asserts that "it must be some one
impression, that gives rise to every real idea. But self...is not any one impression, but
that to which our several impressions and ideas are supposed to have a reference..."
(597). By this he implies that in order to form concrete ideas, ones impressions of pain,
pleasure, joy, etc. must be invariable throughout time. This, Hume states, we know
without a doubt to be impossible. Passions succeed each other over time and give rise to
new passions, therefore "...it cannot be from any of these impressions...that the idea of
self is derived, and consequently there is no such idea" (597). 
Although like Descartes, Hume practiced the art of radical skepticism, he felt that if he
could not utilize his senses to prove something it was meaningless. Hume continued
development of Leibniz's analytical-synthetic distinction, or in Hume's words "...a
distinction between relations of ideas and matters of fact" (Palmer 197). Analytical
propositions are true by definition and are a priori, and therefore necessarily true.
Synthetic propositions are not true by definition and posteriori, and consequently can be
false. However while Hume used these propositions to define analysis, his main
clarification was that while one has the two levels of knowledge, that which is sensible
and that which is found through reason, there is no separation between the two.


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