The eternity of truth
is inherent in it: all truths—not a few grand ones—are equally eternal. I am
sorry that the word eternal should necessarily have an unction which prejudices
dry minds against it, and leads fools to use it without understanding. This
unction is not rhetorical, because the nature of truth is really sublime, and
its name ought to mark its sublimity. Truth is one of the realities covered in
the eclectic religion of our fathers by the idea of God.
George Santayana - Scepticism and Animal Faith (1923)
Even during my lifetime, our concept of truth seems to have
changed. It has become less conspicuous as an ideal underpinning developed
societies. Yet within living memory, truth could still be described as one of the realities covered in the eclectic
religion of our fathers by the idea of God. Today it isn’t so easy to treat
truth as an imperishable ideal. There is also a sense in which the social
status of truth has declined.
In Santayana's day, Christian culture could be said to embrace a view of ultimate reality
where any human viewpoint rarely or never attains the ideal of eternal truth.
Only God understands eternal truth. That gave us a secure ideal for truth –
something we may approach forever but never attain.
It follows that any human view of reality may be improved on
the endless journey towards the ideal of eternal truth. This in turn gives us
an ideal of honesty in the sense that we may honestly strive towards the ideal
of eternal truth while accepting that any point on that journey may be improved,
however fond of older truths we may be.
Of course all this is subject to the numerous failings and
dishonesties of human life. Leaving that aside and acknowledging the
ineradicable nature of human dishonesty, eternal truth as an ideal has enormous
advantages. It takes it away from the human arena - something a secular culture
cannot reliably achieve. This may be familiar secular problem, but it has
become far more serious over the past century and even worse in recent decades.
If truth is not an eternal ideal known only to God, then the
foundations of truth and the search for better truths become shaky and more
easily manipulated. As the social status of Christianity declines so does the
social status of truth. Not something secular society anticipated.
This is not to claim that the foundations of truth were
solid under the care of Christian culture – they were not. Yet the ideal of
eternal truth was secure in its association with the deity and now it is not. This
has allowed all manner of genies to emerge from all manner of bottles.
The baby we are throwing out with the Christian bathwater is
not only the ideal of eternal truth but the corresponding significance of
honesty. It is always honest to pursue a better understanding of eternal truth,
however imperfect that understanding may be. Yet without eternal truth as an
ideal we have no corresponding ideal against which honesty may be judged.
Unfortunately there is more, because the ideal of eternal
truth in a Christian society also has a moral element – the search for truth is
the search for God’s truth. Perhaps not something we should emphasise too
strongly but the moral aspect is not insignificant. Truth is associated with
the deity and the search for it is a moral search. This does allow us to
suggest that as Christianity has declined so has this moral aspect of truth. That makes three babies thrown out with one lot of bathwater
- a particularly careless thing to have done.
2 comments:
Plato thought that we ought to dedicate ourselves to the exploration of beauty, truth and goodness, which are entwined in some way.
If people could see more clearly the link between goodness and truth, I think they would be more respectful of it. For many people, truth is pretty much whatever they can get away with saying. That's why the recent (arts graduate!) veneration of "science" is such a sham. It's basically all a means of getting one's own way in life.
Sam - yes there is a link between goodness and truth. Spinoza thought along similar lines in that he saw understanding as unambiguously good, something to strive for throughout life.
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