>>11146I see how my answer may have seemed irrelevant, and maybe it is to some extent.
As you said, certain words have many different meanings for different people, not to mention that one person's understanding or way of using a word may also differ depending on the situation, their age, mood, etc.
That could even explain many of those people who claim to defend the truth while still seeking it. Maybe they just have a weird meaning associated with "truth". I doubt that's the case though.
Not to mention how a lot of words are used in rhetoric and advertisement as buzzwords to let people associate whatever meaning they want to it. Usually people seek good things, so the empty speech glued together with buzzwords will almost automatically become positive in their interpretations.
I am not well read on this topic, and perhaps reading would just give me a false sense of superior understanding (well, maybe I already have that).
>>11147This also contributed a lot for me to think of them as another religion. Maybe that was not clear in my previous post, but I meant that
>science, logic, reason and proofsare basically just symbols for them that makes anything blindly acceptable, just like authority figures. What you just said.
Still, I wonder if it is even possible for a person to get started with a topic if he has no authority figures to rely on. With the little or no knowledge of an absolute beginner it may be quite hard to evaluate or verify anything for himself, thus needs reliable sources of information that will likely say legit stuff.
I'm not sure. Still way too sure to look like an epistemological nihilist.