Ok. So someone proposes “Ghandi is the Truth”. This is not a debasing of the language. Not at all. I’d be willing to hear his arguments as to why he believes such a thing.
Personalization necessarily “de-principlizes” the truth as a concept. A person is necessarily not a principle; insofar as a personal has a will and some measure of autonomy, she is manifestly not a rule. To extent a man is just a principle, he is an automaton, and “de-personalized”.
This is easy to see as problematic in action if you take the Ghandi case, and commit to Ghandi’s hagiography as “the Truth”, personified. Now, with that affirmation, if Ghandi announces some new policy that we would otherwise (based on a principle – correspondence theory, model performance, etc.) say is “false”, or otherwise bogus, the new Policy (“The British are inherently evil, a lesser race with less claim to human rights and dignities!”), NOW, because you’ve equivocated on truth as a principle and truth as a person, Ghandi is now, by definition correct.
There is no saying, “but wait a minute, now Ghandi’s gone off the deep end, so he really isn’t the Truth”. That’s just an admission that the idenftication of Ghandi as the Truth was never an earnest proposition. If it’s Ghandi, the same person, now promoting the Truth of British Inferiority, then that is the truth, because Ghandi is the truth.
This is how “truth” as a concept, a useful principle all around, for theists atheists, and everyone in between, is debased. It converts a principled criterion (even if there is disagreement over the particulars of the criterion) into a political matter of personal identity, a cult devotion to a
person. To the extent that person is self-directed and operates on their own choices, “truth” is debased as a term of art in the discourse.
As I said, I would be willing to consider it. What arguments does someone have for saying that, say, “Stalin is the truth”?
See above. I think Stalin makes the case even more clearly, but perhaps it’s distracting because Stalin was such an extreme figure. Perhaps Ghandi as an example makes the point with less distraction.
It would be if one starts with the premise that Jesus is the Truth, as if it stands alone. There is another poster here who insists that PW must stand alone as an argument for theists. Why? What outside criterion demands this?
Similarly, why must “Jesus is the Truth” stand alone as an argument for theists?
It doesn’t have to as a matter of argument. The problem is semantic, in equivocating between a principle and a person. The only that is not problematic is if Jesus doesn’t have a will, and is impersonal.
That I think an unlikely position to take, but that would eliminate the equivocation, reducing Jesus (or Ghandi, or Stalin) to just an automaton.
This is categorically not true. Truth is a principle, yet its fulfillment is a Person. They are not mutually exclusive.
Perhaps not, but the problem is
conflation, not exclusion. You are just as “true” as Jesus is/was, and arguably more true, in that we can supply a whole lot more objective evidential support for your existence, behavior, ideas and actions, the truth of who you are than we can for Jesus. And this shows where the language debasing obtains. A selfish thief is just as “true” as anyone else, on the principle at work. We can formulate propositions that are more or less true (depending on how accurate we are in depicting the actual circumstance) about Joe Grifter. Does proposition X correspond with the actual state of affairs in the world? Well, yes or no, or in between, that is your index to the truth of X.
Saying “Joe Grifter is the Truth” mangles those semantics, and conflates that effective understanding of “true” with “good”, or other subjective values. You don’t have to like, dislike or even care about a proposition to affirm it’s truth:
There is a rock on this table. It’s truthiness doesn’t depend on your values.
Nooooo. Clearly our “own ideas” as humans conflict with Jesus’ “own ideas”.
I’m sure that happens, but nowhere does “actual” enter into the picture here. This signals the debasement of the term. Now, on your model, “true” is detached from the actual. It’s now become a statement of political ideology. That’s debasing.
-TS