The Great Admission
I – As conscious beings advance, their understanding of existence within will necessarily advance.
II – Given the inherent biological, perceptual, or structural limitations of conscious beings, it is unlikely they will ever gain absolute certainty in their understanding of existence Within.
III – Even if conscious beings advance sufficiently to overcome their inherent limitations, it remains unlikely they will gain absolute certainty in their understanding of existence Within.
IV – Even if conscious beings gain absolute certainty in their understanding of existence Within, they can never assert absolute certainty in their understanding of existence Without.
V – As such, Those Who Muse must accept a reasonable degree of certainty so long as adequate care has been given to the subject in question.
VI – Beyond this reasonable certainty lies Faith.
VII – This Faith is foundational to the beliefs of Those Who Muse.
* Within: those concepts that interact with our existence.
* Without: those concepts that do not need our existence to exist.
* Certainty: is the state of being completely confident and assured in the truth or accuracy of an idea, principle, thought, or perception