Archive for August, 2005

seeking for truth

Wednesday, August 24th, 2005

We can specify all kind of civilizating human-race into three major categories. The Survivors, the Settlers, and the conquerors.

If these three grades of human-race arranged by an ‘ordinate-subordinate scale’ we possibly find an obvious pattern that  shows survivors may take two positions, on the very bottom and on the top of the grades and the settlers always stands under the conquerors.

In any degrees of any categories of civilization, the seeking of truth and existence never stops. Never was and never will.

It begun with science.

All sciences begin with attempts to define.

Nothing ever has been defined.

Because there is nothing to define.

Darwin wrote “The Origin of Species.”

He was never able to tell what he meant by a “species.” It is not possible to define.

Nothing has ever been finally found out.

Because there is nothing final to find out.

It’s like looking for a needle that no one ever lost in a haystack that never was —

But that all scientific attempts really to find out something, whereas really there is nothing to find out, are attempts, themselves, really to be something.

A seeker of Truth. He will never find it. But the dimmest of possibilities—he may himself become Truth.

Or that science is more than an inquiry:

That it is a pseudo-construction, or a quasi-organization: that it is an attempt to break away and locally establish harmony, stability, equilibrium, consistency, entity —

Dimmest of possibilities—that it may succeed.

And if all the propability of truth is redefined  we can find only one way to reveal what covered under it before the sight of dogmative and normative rules wich eshtabilshed many ages by reconstructing a repetitive structure of suspicion on truth itself.

What if there’s no conclusion on any variables we found on the process?

That’s truth.

The moving area of flexible, contextual and miscilanieous possibility is what truth outside and within.