Truth



We all know that truth is more often than not subjective - not absolute - and that versions of the same story can be recounted differently. Truth has many variables which in turn change as the human experience evolves in the illusion of time.

To experience in the age of technology at least presents a picture of what actually occurred using surveillance equipment.

Ah ... but then we get to emotions and how they influence truth in the psychological profiles of humanity.

We expect the truth from those who lead and protect us such as parents, teachers, family, friends, health care workers, politicians, and law-enforcement yet there is a learning curve with all of that.

In the duality of reality - especially today in these political, economic, health and social climates, the truth is not easy to know yet alone maintain ... Hence the creation of conspiracy theories most of which are based on finding the truth behind the deception.

With everything that happens, such as COVID-19 - we know that for all the amazingly wonderful things people are doing honoring the truth of their professions - dramas are going to play out. That's the nature of duality ... and the truth as we experience it here in physical reality - a simulation built on conspiracies and lies tempered by love and truth.

In the end the biggest truth of all - who we are and why we are here - will come to light. In the interim we play all of our games in this makeshift reality treating it as if it is a sophisticated way of expressing our emotions while determining our own version of events.




Truth by Roger Bacon


About Roger Bacon


English scientist Roger Bacon's 800-year-old tonic for what ails us: The truth
  PhysOrg - May 5, 2020

English scientist Roger Bacon's 800-year-old tonic for what ails us: The truth. It seems that science has been taking a beating lately. From decades of denial by the tobacco industry that smoking causes cancer to more recent attempts to use the COVID-19 pandemic to score political points, a presumption seems to have taken root that it is okay to seek and speak the truth only when it suits personal interest.

In times like these, we urgently need leaders who know what they are talking about and whose commitment to truth exceeds their loyalty to party or person - among them, the sort of people long known as scientists ("those who know," the literal meaning of scientist). COVID-19 is a kind of plague, but so is ignorance, and only by addressing the latter can society tackle the former.

This year marks what is believed by many to be the 800th birthday of an especially courageous truth seeker, the English polymath Roger Bacon. Though other scientists came before him, his breadth of study has led many to call him "the first scientist." Were he alive today, Bacon would likely be pursuing the truth about such matters as the coronavirus and its effects on society, as well as the need for personal and political virtues to overcome it. Read more ...





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