18 December 2021

Words - inexhaustible explorations


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I love these words from Albus Dumbledore (from Michael Gambon's Deathly Hallows: Part 2).

To me, words truly do seem an inexhaustible source of magic, wondering and exploration. 

In contrast, I am entirely exhaustible. My writing plans have been swamped with other things and my energy and time are finite. 

Post-truth and truth have been way bigger explorations that I anticipated (and will ever attempt again - please remind me!) The end of the year has arrived well before I have explored all I wanted to about these two words. Still to come are two posts on the fit, usefulness, awareness and need for the house construction metaphor for truth, which will explore what we might be able to do with a better metaphor.

But, next year, after some R&R. 

Wordly Explorations will pick up again in February 2022, covid-willing.

 









4 December 2021

Post-truth (part 13) - lead up the garden path by a metaphor

I've now been exploring the house construction metaphor for truth for a year. It's a long time since I declared the journey metaphor for truth was false and misleading.

photo of lush garden with paved path curving away into the distance
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My interest in the truth was piqued by the word post-truth. Post means 'after' - which seems odd. Because the journey metaphor tells us we're on a torturous journey, heading toward truth (eventually), what does it mean to be in a time or place after truth? Are we lost; did we miss our truth destination somehow?

As I wrote in part 8, post-truth is a dangerous cover word for propaganda. But how does propaganda fit in the journey metaphor? What about lies, illusions, gaslighting, beliefs and wrong beliefs, delusions, mistaken memory, how do they all fit in the journey metaphor?

Our sense of truth is fundamentally important to us as individuals and as a society. Despite turning away from religion and toward science as our key source of truth, humanity's desire for truth remains tied to our needs for belonging, agency, safety, meaning and certainty.

So, how we think about truth is extremely important.

A critical question remains: is our metaphor for truth really that important? How does the journey metaphor influence how we think about truth, the varieties of 'non'-truth, and post-truth