Ah precisely, so he's trying to sell me a wine bottle, only that he's replaced the wine with water. I see.But the cost of this is the giving up of the isolated and a-historical ego, which is somehow impervious to historical forces and desirous of eternalizing a particular understanding of things. — Erik
Why would Truth have a history? Quite the contrary, Truth must be that which does not have a history, that which remains the same through history. The truth which has a history is not interesting, because it is a changing truth.But what would this eternal Truth be? And how do we, as radically finite beings, ever attain an understanding of it? My guess is that whatever it is, it has a history; and one which, incidentally, may not diminish its significance in the way I'd imagine you think it would. — Erik
Yes, I am familiar with his use of aletheia.Well, are you familiar with Heidegger's notion of truth as alethia? Huh? — Erik
Yes, I would disagree with Heidegger here that Being is historical. Being obviously reveals itself through history, but that wouldn't make it historical.Being is historical, and therefore Truth (as unconcealment) is historical. There's no Being without Truth and no Truth without Being. (capitalizing for dramatic effect) — Erik
Okay, I will read this and then get back to you! :) Is there a particular translation or can I just read this one:But please give my previous recommendation a read and get back to me on this. — Erik
In a post truth world where truth is unconcealedness, that which is the case but has long since been hidden is no longer... concealed.
When reality imposes itself upon one in such a way that s/he must either change their belief about reality and/or devalue the role that reality has in determining what it makes sense to believe, the ground of one's belief system becomes paramount.
If one's view of others is guided by a with us or against us principle, it can be very problematic. I mean that can pave the way to an overwhelmingly powerful criterion built upon confirmation bias alone.
Hence... currently in the US, we have begun to see the notion of 'Deep State' being used in precisely this manner...
I wrote:
In a post truth world where truth is unconcealedness, that which is the case but has long since been hidden is no longer... concealed.
Sand replied:
So, you're saying Truth is no longer concealed in a theoretical "Post-Truth" world. That doesn't make much sense.
I wrote:
In a post truth world where truth is unconcealedness, that which is the case but has long since been hidden is no longer... concealed.
Sand replied:
So, you're saying Truth is no longer concealed in a theoretical "Post-Truth" world. That doesn't make much sense.
That's not what I wrote, nor does it follow from what I wrote.
In a post truth world where truth is unconcealedness, that which is the case but has long since been hidden is no longer hidden. The world after the unveiling would be the post truth world...
In a post truth world where truth is unconcealedness, that which is the case but has long since been hidden is no longer... concealed.
Truth is no longer concealed in a theoretical "Post-Truth" world.
I mean, the current situation involves an overwhelming amount of distrust in elected and/or government officials(regardless of whether or not that is well-grounded).
The collective conscience has accepted insincerity as the norm, but it hasn't accepted any and all forms thereof. It is certainly the case that some instances of dishonesty are still widely considered unacceptable...
And yet others seem to argue from the idea that all lies are equal.
All the stuff about Heidegger is irrelevant to the thread. — creativesoul
The Heidegger tangent is relevant due to Heiddy's use of the term "truth" — creativesoul
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