Their beliefs may change but the truth doesn't.
FoeHammer.
Foe this is a good point, interestingly enough. Let's expand on it using a concept from Statistics.
In statistics we are faced with trying to figure out what the mean of a population is. We assume from the
central limit theorem that the distribution of values we are measuring is
Normally Distributed
But in reality we almost never measure every single member of any given population. Most times we
could never do that. There's simply too many things to measure.
In statistics we differentiate between
The POPULATION mean (m)
and
The SAMPLE mean (x) (I can't put the little bar over the x, sorry).
The sample mean is usually an
approximation of the population mean. We don't really know the variance of the total population so we have to make some assumptions that our sample acts as a good sample of the whole population.
Why this Matters To Your Statement:
Think of "TRUTH" as the unknown population mean. We scientists are in the process of trying to find TRUTH but we are,
as are you and all other human beings limited in how much we can find, see, feel experience, measure, explore. So in the end the best any scientist can
ever claim is that we are reasonably sure we know
approximately what the "real truth" is. But we also realize we might find some data that shows our estimates of the VARIANCE (variability) of the data mean we are off a bit. Or a lot!
The key is that we are TRYING to find TRUTH and that is the best we can do. The value of science is that it is transparent and can leverage the work of millions of people all around the earth regardless of their religious affiliation, club membership, hair color, sexual orientation, etc.
The really important key is that
YOU do not have any more of a
fast track into what TRUTH is than the sum total of human endeavors to find that truth.
If you do, it is not because you are tapped into something GREATER but because you were lucky enough to stumble onto the exact
Population Mean of "TRUTH". And even then you could
never prove you were there to any one else until
all of the population of information bits had been gathered and it was therefore proven you were on the mean.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Humanity doesn't know absolute "TRUTH". YOU are human. Ergo you don't
know absolute "TRUTH" any more than we do.
I hope I didn't ramble too far off the path. And if there's any better statisticians on the board, please correct any of my errors! (I'm working hard over the past few years to get a better grounding in statistics--but I'm still learning).