And here is where I state that the Bible does not meet this definition. The command "you shall not murder" may be interpreted into oblivion, but it has a singular truth.mOctave wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 5:39 amI'd say something is subjective when its true meaning is individualized and it has no singular truth.Crazy Anglican wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 3:15 amSure, I guess my question is what do you mean by subjective? It looks like you mean subject to interpretation. I'd agree with that, of course. Any written document is.
I think we often confuse the Bible itself and our interpretations of it. The Bible is true, and no matter who is reading it, it holds the same truth. However, we may interpret it differently, and sometimes not exactly as the Bible states.
So the Bible is objectively true, and our interpretations our subjective. This is the very nature of an interpretation, but as the Crazy Anglican brought up, it also applies to reading anything at all.
When the Bible says "be charitable" it means just that - be charitable. It is objective, and no matter who reads it or how they read it, that is what it means. Which charity to give to is not a matter of interpreting it, it is simply doing it. The Bible does not state specifically how to be charitable, so however you are charitable, you are fulfilling the objective command. Sure, it requires a basic understanding of what "charitable" means, but that is because it is a written book, and relies on writing and language to communicate.
This is why I claim that we must have an objective ultimate standard, because without one, truth becomes circular, and then it becomes up to the individual to determine truth.mOctave wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 5:39 am(As an interesting side note, Oxford's definition of truth includes the word "fact," and their definition of fact includes the word "true." Same goes with "accurate," "correct," and truth. It seems like no one can easily define what truth is, which could make this conversation interesting.)