
I believe the following propositions (i.e. 'statements') are true:
1 - God exists.
2 - Jesus is God incarnate.
3 - The only way to God is through Jesus (Jesus is, e.g., "the door").
My beliefs marginalize many people.
Such is the nature of truth. Truth-claims marginalize. "Truth," whatever it is (e.g., as a property of statements), is not all-inclusive. (I'm now reading philosopher Simon Blackburn's book Truth: A Guide.)
Here is something that shocks most of my logic students, because they are so postmodern-relativistic: If a proposition (statement) is true, it is true for everyone.
To illustrate: Consider the statement The lights in this room are on. If it is true, it's true for everyone, everywhere, cross-temporally. If someone thinks this statement is false (while it is true), then they are wrong.
All persons have a worldview, a belief system. One's beliefs can be articulated in a series of statements. The beliefs of other people sometimes marginalize me, when I think they are false.
4 - God does not exist.
5 - Jesus is not God incarnate.
6 - There are many ways to God.
P4 marginalizes all theists, such as myself.
To say that P4, P5, and P6 "marginalize" me is to say they do not include me. I am outside the margins of any worldview that believes P4, P5, and P6.
Every proposition has a certain level of arrogance attached to it. Consider, e.g., the following:
7 - I am now writing this sentence.
P7 is, I believe, true. Or, a moment ago, P7 was true, but now P7 is false. But still, P7's truth was only probable, and someone could reasonably believe it was false. Nonetheless, P7's arrogance-level seems to me to be low. Which means that most would accept P7 as having been true a moment ago.
Now try this:
8 - One should never try to convert others to one's own way of thinking.
P8 seems to have a high arrogance-level. Because P8 is itself a way of thinking that is being forced on someone like me who thinks P8 to be inherently false. P8 functions for me in the same way that P3 functions for others. P8-ers are trying to convert me.
Let me try one more.
9 - Christian theists like Piippo think they are right and that people who disagree with them are wrong.
Of course. But so what? That is the nature of propositional thinking.
A proposition is a sentence that is either true or false. In logic, there's no "true for me" stuff (i.e., don't commit the "subjectivist fallacy"). Every proposition contains a level of epistemic arrogance that necessarily marginalizes those who dissent.
This is unavoidable.






















