"I'm not religious, I'm spiritual." Conversely other people state that they dislike the formality of religion, of beliefs and practices, but do believe in God and in some sense of 'higher truth.' This confusion might be best addressed by doing away with the category of religion altogether -- religion is whatever a society defines it to be, and the term has grown so meaningless, people even speak of making golf or music their 'religion' simply because they love these hobbies so much.
Absolute truth
In this postmodern age, the idea of absolute truth has ebbed away. In medieval times, absolute truth for Christians was manifest in Jesus; for some empires the word of a great leader was a manifestation of absolute truth, and for Buddhists, the absence of any 'absolutes' in the world is 'the truth.' Philosophy and science have a more rigorous but also a narrower set of criteria for the establishment of absolute truth. Perhaps truth can only be properly understood by setting limits of knowledge: for example, when constructing a deductive syllogism, it is possible to say: 'Socrates is a man, all men are mortal, ergo Socrates is mortal.' But a higher sense of truth that exists outside of these constructed boundaries may not exist.
Absolute truth cannot be proven unless we have a definition of what is 'absolute.' In science, which has its own set of boundaries and rigorous sense of what constitutes empirical knowledge, a hypothesis can be proved through experimentation. But in the world outside of scientific epistemology, truth becomes more flexible -- in a court of law, witnesses remember events differently. People demand 'absolute truth' in terms of proof of someone else's love, but emotional truth is always subjective and can shift from moment to moment. And in studying history the idea of absolute...
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