Knowing something for sure is not straight forward. The past is replete with a nihilistic history of impartations from antiquity to modern times by philosophers who turned epistemology and even ontology on its head. From the mystical to the hard-edgedaffront of steely declamations, knowing and truth have suffered consummate slaughter. How did this happen, and what thought of knowing gave it the practical st ...Full description
Knowing something for sure is not straight forward. The past is replete with a nihilistic history of impartations from antiquity to modern times by philosophers who turned epistemology and even ontology on its head. From the mystical to the hard-edgedaffront of steely declamations, knowing and truth have suffered consummate slaughter. How did this happen, and what thought of knowing gave it the practical state of necrosis to which it has been relegated. Can we return to a time of knowing and believing, and what is the path we must take to reinstate true knowledge?