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28- The different
faces of human truth

The different faces of human truth
28. The search for truth, of
course, is not always so transparent nor does it always
produce such results. The natural limitation of reason
and the inconstancy of the heart often obscure and
distort a person's search. Truth can also drown in a
welter of other concerns. People can even run from the
truth as soon as they glimpse it because they are afraid
of its demands. Yet, for all that they may evade it, the
truth still influences life. Life in fact can never be
grounded upon doubt, uncertainty or deceit; such an
existence would be threatened constantly by fear and
anxiety. One may define the human being, therefore, as
the one who seeks the truth.
29. It is unthinkable that a
search so deeply rooted in human nature would be
completely vain and useless. The capacity to search for
truth and to pose questions itself implies the rudiments
of a response. Human beings would not even begin to
search for something of which they knew nothing or for
something which they thought was wholly beyond them. Only
the sense that they can arrive at an answer leads them to
take the first step. This is what normally happens in
scientific research. When scientists, following their
intuition, set out in search of the logical and
verifiable explanation of a phenomenon, they are
confident from the first that they will find an answer,
and they do not give up in the face of setbacks. They do
not judge their original intuition useless simply because
they have not reached their goal; rightly enough they
will say that they have not yet found a satisfactory
answer.
The same must be equally true of
the search for truth when it comes to the ultimate
questions. The thirst for truth is so rooted in the human
heart that to be obliged to ignore it would cast our
existence into jeopardy. Everyday life shows well enough
how each one of us is preoccupied by the pressure of a
few fundamental questions and how in the soul of each of
us there is at least an outline of the answers. One
reason why the truth of these answers convinces is that
they are no different in substance from the answers to
which many others have come. To be sure, not every truth
to which we come has the same value. But the sum of the
results achieved confirms that in principle the human
being can arrive at the truth.
30. It may help, then, to turn
briefly to the different modes of truth. Most of them
depend upon immediate evidence or are confirmed by
experimentation. This is the mode of truth proper to
everyday life and to scientific research. At another
level we find philosophical truth, attained by means of
the speculative powers of the human intellect. Finally,
there are religious truths which are to some degree
grounded in philosophy, and which we find in the answers
which the different religious traditions offer to the
ultimate questions.(27)
The truths of philosophy, it
should be said, are not restricted only to the sometimes
ephemeral teachings of professional philosophers. All men
and women, as I have noted, are in some sense
philosophers and have their own philosophical conceptions
with which they direct their lives. In one way or other,
they shape a comprehensive vision and an answer to the
question of life's meaning; and in the light of this they
interpret their own life's course and regulate their
behaviour. At this point, we may pose the question of the
link between, on the one hand, the truths of philosophy
and religion and, on the other, the truth revealed in
Jesus Christ. But before tackling that question, one last
datum of philosophy needs to be weighed.
31. Human beings are not made to
live alone. They are born into a family and in a family
they grow, eventually entering society through their
activity. From birth, therefore, they are immersed in
traditions which give them not only a language and a
cultural formation but also a range of truths in which
they believe almost instinctively. Yet personal growth
and maturity imply that these same truths can be cast
into doubt and evaluated through a process of critical
enquiry. It may be that, after this time of transition,
these truths are recovered as a result of the
experience of life or by dint of further reasoning.
Nonetheless, there are in the life of a human being many
more truths which are simply believed than truths which
are acquired by way of personal verification. Who, for
instance, could assess critically the countless
scientific findings upon which modern life is based? Who
could personally examine the flow of information which
comes day after day from all parts of the world and which
is generally accepted as true? Who in the end could forge
anew the paths of experience and thought which have
yielded the treasures of human wisdom and religion? This
means that the human beingthe one who seeks the
truthis also the one who lives by belief.
32. In believing, we entrust
ourselves to the knowledge acquired by other people. This
suggests an important tension. On the one hand, the
knowledge acquired through belief can seem an imperfect
form of knowledge, to be perfected gradually through
personal accumulation of evidence; on the other hand,
belief is often humanly richer than mere evidence,
because it involves an interpersonal relationship and
brings into play not only a person's capacity to know but
also the deeper capacity to entrust oneself to others, to
enter into a relationship with them which is intimate and
enduring.
It should be stressed that the
truths sought in this interpersonal relationship are not
primarily empirical or philosophical. Rather, what is
sought is the truth of the personwhat the person is
and what the person reveals from deep within. Human
perfection, then, consists not simply in acquiring an
abstract knowledge of the truth, but in a dynamic
relationship of faithful self-giving with others. It is
in this faithful self-giving that a person finds a
fullness of certainty and security. At the same time,
however, knowledge through belief, grounded as it is on
trust between persons, is linked to truth: in the act of
believing, men and women entrust themselves to the truth
which the other declares to them.
Any number of examples could be
found to demonstrate this; but I think immediately of the
martyrs, who are the most authentic witnesses to the
truth about existence. The martyrs know that they have
found the truth about life in the encounter with Jesus
Christ, and nothing and no-one could ever take this
certainty from them. Neither suffering nor violent death
could ever lead them to abandon the truth which they have
discovered in the encounter with Christ. This is why to
this day the witness of the martyrs continues to arouse
such interest, to draw agreement, to win such a hearing
and to invite emulation. This is why their word inspires
such confidence: from the moment they speak to us of what
we perceive deep down as the truth we have sought for so
long, the martyrs provide evidence of a love that has no
need of lengthy arguments in order to convince. The
martyrs stir in us a profound trust because they give
voice to what we already feel and they declare what we
would like to have the strength to express.
33. Step by step, then, we are
assembling the terms of the question. It is the nature of
the human being to seek the truth. This search looks not
only to the attainment of truths which are partial,
empirical or scientific; nor is it only in individual
acts of decision-making that people seek the true good.
Their search looks towards an ulterior truth which would
explain the meaning of life. And it is therefore a search
which can reach its end only in reaching the
absolute.(28) Thanks to the inherent capacities of
thought, man is able to encounter and recognize a truth
of this kind. Such a truthvital and necessary as it
is for lifeis attained not only by way of reason
but also through trusting acquiescence to other persons
who can guarantee the authenticity and
certainty of the truth itself. There is no doubt that the
capacity to entrust oneself and one's life to another
person and the decision to do so are among the most
significant and expressive human acts.
It must not be forgotten that
reason too needs to be sustained in all its searching by
trusting dialogue and sincere friendship. A climate of
suspicion and distrust, which can beset speculative
research, ignores the teaching of the ancient
philosophers who proposed friendship as one of the most
appropriate contexts for sound philosophical enquiry.
From all that I have said to
this point it emerges that men and women are on a journey
of discovery which is humanly unstoppablea search
for the truth and a search for a person to whom they
might entrust themselves. Christian faith comes to meet
them, offering the concrete possibility of reaching the
goal which they seek. Moving beyond the stage of simple
believing, Christian faith immerses human beings in the
order of grace, which enables them to share in the
mystery of Christ, which in turn offers them a true and
coherent knowledge of the Triune God. In Jesus Christ,
who is the Truth, faith recognizes the ultimate appeal to
humanity, an appeal made in order that what we experience
as desire and nostalgia may come to its fulfilment.
34. This truth, which God
reveals to us in Jesus Christ, is not opposed to the
truths which philosophy perceives. On the contrary, the
two modes of knowledge lead to truth in all its fullness.
The unity of truth is a fundamental premise of human
reasoning, as the principle of non-contradiction makes
clear. Revelation renders this unity certain, showing
that the God of creation is also the God of salvation
history. It is the one and the same God who establishes
and guarantees the intelligibility and reasonableness of
the natural order of things upon which scientists
confidently depend,(29) and who reveals himself as the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. This unity of truth,
natural and revealed, is embodied in a living and
personal way in Christ, as the Apostle reminds us:
Truth is in Jesus (cf. Eph 4:21; Col
1:15-20). He is the eternal Word in whom all things were
created, and he is the incarnate Word who in his entire
person (30) reveals the Father (cf. Jn 1:14, 18). What
human reason seeks without knowing it (cf.
Acts 17:23) can be found only through Christ: what is
revealed in him is the full truth (cf. Jn
1:14-16) of everything which was created in him and
through him and which therefore in him finds its
fulfilment (cf. Col 1:17).
35. On the basis of these broad
considerations, we must now explore more directly the
relationship between revealed truth and philosophy. This
relationship imposes a twofold consideration, since the
truth conferred by Revelation is a truth to be understood
in the light of reason. It is this duality alone which
allows us to specify correctly the relationship between
revealed truth and philosophical learning. First, then,
let us consider the links between faith and philosophy in
the course of history. From this, certain principles will
emerge as useful reference-points in the attempt to
establish the correct link between the two orders of
knowledge.

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