Just randomly going with this part of the statement:
To accept something as true one arrives at an understanding: whatever it is, it makes sense.
In other words, it fits within a context, a view of the world that has already been accepted as true.
That world view incorporates the new concept and, although altered in some way, does not change with respect to its foundations.
We develop views of how the cosmos is ordered. That order, the models that describe it change (e.g.: We no longer “see” a vault above us, but imagine space spreading out.). The fundamental premises that the world is not illusion, and that our senses and mind reveal it to us is maintained as we try to further our knowledge towards more valid and more comprehensive understandings.
New truths are shown, demonstrated, proven and communicated, shared among people, who would view them from different perspectives and understand them different ways.
The world view that emerges through our interactions within reality is determined by the type of relationship we have with the object of our study.
An empirical approach will result in a particular cosmological picture because of what is being studied and the way in which this is done.
A problem arises when tries to grasp a particular subject with a wrong approach, like trying to understand God empirically.
Let us bring this closer to home.
Say we want to try to get to know who it is that is doing the knowing or what the knowing is itself.
You can take the empirical approach and come up with many interesting facts about neurology and behaviour.
This really doesn’t bring you any closer to the knower or the knowing, which is the most true reality: the beingness of all this.
You cannot measure being.
It is so personal, immediate; it contains the senses, rather than vice versa, as the things we relate to are contained by the senses and mind.
Being, however, belongs to the “structure” that constitutes the spiritual world. I am not going to say anything about beauty, goodness and truth itself.
(Sorry, I can’t contain myself - They are ultimately the same thing and the eternal Source of all.)
If one is searching for spiritual truth, one has to approach the matter in a totally different way than one would the material or the purely psychological.
I am going to say that:
- the Truth exists
- it is understandable
- very many persons have understood it, since the beginning
- it is in fact obvious
How would one show it to be true?
These understandings come by ways described as faith, intuition, realization, and ultimately revelation - the veil is lifted and Reality shows itself.
Seek and you will find.