wanabe wrote:Tfindlay wrote:Some truths are a priori: All bachelors are single.
Some are relative: Buddhism is better than Atheism.
Strangely enough, theses are both relative... We decide probably via the dictionary(which by enlarge is the reflection of a consensus of the folks at oxford) what the meaning of "bachelors" and "single" mean(in actuality this works both ways; I'm simply making a point).
And, strangely enough, after having made a very good and observant point indeed, you add:
wanabe wrote:No matter how many people agree: 1 apple + 1 apple =5 apples , that doesn't change the fact that there are only 2 apples in actuality.
Still, as soon as applied to the physical,
results of mathematics become only relatively true. For, ought we not here for instance, ask: why view them [apples] as a pair of "ones" and not as X amounts of atoms? Is it because of what the naked eye sees and sees not? Perhaps...
Yet, it is still just as true, that what we have before us
isa bunch of atoms [a trunch of neurons, maybe], which do not at all add up to a pair of "ones" of anything(or to five "singles" of anything, for that matter).
We chose to speak of "apples" and not "atoms", which means we chose a
perspective on "reality". This is of course fine because it is absolutely necessary. But, we must not forget, that in no way, is our chosen perspective the only possible true one!
Nowadays, when it comes to atoms, we know they are there despite the fact that we do not see them and so, it is easy for us to understand that there are two apples
and a bunch of atoms, and that these statements describe same thing in different ways. But there may be similar situations in which that may not be so clear, though still just as true.
Am I making any sense any longer? Oh, dear...
Hermit