Posts tagged ‘conscience’

When truth is truth

LINK: ‘Note Verbale‘, Manila Times (Sunday-Career Section) – 9 December 2007 Issue

“The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless one fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly – it must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over”, German politician and Adolf Hitler’s propagandist, Paul Joseph Goebbels, once said. Consistent with this idea, he was also quoted in saying that – “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.”

Obviously, the prescription is scheming and shrewd.

Since the beginning of mankind, there has been a constant conflict between truth and lies.

Although there seems to be no single definition of truth, the term is understood in ordinary parlance as a fact that has been verified, or something that conforms to reality or actuality, or something that approximates either of them. Classical theories hold that the truthfulness or falsity of a representation is determined solely by how it relates to or describes a reality undistorted or unaffected by emotions or personal bias.

A lie, on the other hand, is simply the opposite being a statement or a representation that deviates from the truth.

Theoretically, it is easy to say or discern that truth is good and lies are bad because like day and night the distinction appears objective and unperturbed. But in the real world, many truths are blurred and subtle. Ironically, many lies are perceived as truth. And the resulting confusion may be readily understood because it is instinctive of human nature to retreat from unpleasant realities. Perhaps, the biggest lie that a person can make is to claim not having resorted to it not even once in his or her lifetime. Truth to tell, everyone did without any exception.

Because truth is idyllic, many lies would have to hide under its cover. To succeed in this effort, lies must bear the perception of truth. And to create and stimulate the perception, prevaricators need to resort to propaganda. Some may call it media hype, promotion or even advertising.

With the advancement in mass media technology, the battle between truth and lies has even gained more momentum these days. The consequence of course is confusion and in many instances, disagreements and divisions.

But, except maybe for pure science or those considered as so-called demonstrated truths, is not truth relative or really just a matter of perception? 

German philosopher and sociologist, Jürgen Habermas, for instance, believes in the consensus theory, or that the truth is whatever is agreed upon. Italian philosopher Giovanni Battista Vico is best known for his verum ipsum factum principle, or that truth itself is socially created by human norms and experience. American philosophers, John Dewey, Charles Sanders Peirce and William James, concede on the pragmatic theory as a version of truth, or that truth is affirmed by the results of putting concepts into practice. Italian Saint Thomas Aquinas put truth as “the conformity of the intellect to the things”. Another German philosopher, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, thinks that “The falseness of a judgment is to us not necessarily an objection to a judgment… The question is to what extent it is life-advancing, life-preserving, species-preserving, perhaps even species-breeding…”

If truth then is just a matter of perception, how could it set human beings free as the Bible has put it?

The answer lies in the prudent exercise of the inherent gift of discernment that every human being is endowed with. And the validity of that discernment is ultimately put to test by one’s conscience. The truth is – one’s conscience never lies.

Every individual then who honestly believes that something is true with a clear and clean conscience holds the truth, even if others disagree. In that sense, the truth will set a person free.

A matter of conscience

The guilty is always the victim of the injured.” – Law Professor Jose Diloy Jr. (in a casual conversation at the CLEAR Office of Arellano Law School, 15 September 2006)