Seems a bit of interesting serious babbling is running here :)
I won't dispute the possibility of things to be true or not, it is not my ground in this reply. Just... I've read upward some mistakes such as :
- confusing truth and perception : hence the infamous "relative truth" which is abusive phrase because truth is something that is valid on a universal scale.
- confusing truth and fact(s) : facts are percieved to begin with, and said perception can even be fragmentary if not nonexistent depending on circumstances ; as well, percieving a fact (ex : smoke smell) does not imply you would understand the things going on (from trivial to catastrophic possibilities) ; additionally, a pile of facts makes no sense without coherence/understanding, that is to say we need to analyse facts in order to "screen" some pieces of information and extract sense from it.
So well, truth neither being relative nor facts, what could it be ?
Let's talkd about semantics. There are words that can be grouped with 'truth' in several ways. For example : 'hole'. This word qualifies not anything "positively" but an absence, a lack, a breach/gap, etc through something. Now let's analyse 'truth'. Some philosopher once said something like "who wants the truth, wants not to mislead people or (at least) themselve", which means or implies :
- no errors (error-less-ness)
- no mistakes (mistake-less)
- no misunderstandings (misunderstanding-less-ness)
- no ignorance (ignorance-less-ness)
...
All to say this concept of "truth" does not exist
per se but only in negation / by absence of undesirable "things" (lies, errors, etc) that we positively/possibly may encounter and reject.
Last word... Good scientists do not seek "truth" but
knowledge. A fairly different thing while lots of people do confuse both. Knowledge is about uncovering our ignorance by discovering accurate pieces of information : the very process name is 'learning'. We learn the exitence of lies, wich is factually knowledge, while we hope the truth to pierce through lies. That is to say that knowledge is wider than a pile of truths.
I leave here this semantic analysis. I hope it to nuture this discussion in some way.