Truth is a location for humans. Truth is the place where humans
find and name a pattern they perceive. Humans consider this area
a boundary. The boundary shows humans itself and two other
areas. This boundary is often in the form of a line or dots or
touches itself to enclose areas which demarks areas as
TRUE/FALSE, INNER/OUTER, etc. The boundary itself is also an
area and subject to further zooming, moving, erasing, and for
finding and naming more perceived patterns within. These
boundaries can be very persistent across human history among
humans. Boundaries found and named by humans can also be very
useful for their survival and recreation. Some useful boundaries
are patterns found and named that appear to change shape when a
human is considered alive and as they change shape, they also
change the shape of the available of an area for what humans
consider "air". An inhale changes the shape of a boundary called
"lungs". This "lungs" accommodate more "air" across its boundary
and the air appears to pass through other boundaried areas that
could be considered "holes", entering another area called "the
body" when the boundary of lungs is one shape, and leaving "the
body" when the boundary of lungs is of another shape. Taking a
closer look at these "lungs", this "body", this "air", these
"holes", humans find and name even *more* boundaries demarking
areas and so on and so forth. What makes these boundaries True?
They are useful for humans. Humans find and name these
boundaries with an emotion that I will call "Important". Humans
consider a boundary and the areas it demarcates "Important".
Much of a humans time is noticeably active with debating areas,
looking closer and further away at boundaries, erasing areas of
the boundary, adding new boundaries through patterns they
perceive and name and consider to be true because it is
emotionally considered Important. I do not wish to name them
all. They are often called "categories" when they look at
boundaries from far away but when they look more closely, often
the "category" patterns found and perceived and named are
forgotten and instead smaller boundaries are considered
Important.