I don’t feel that Tarski says anything untrue the way that Gendlin does. It doesn’t say that believing the unfair world won’t hurt, or that you’re already enduring the knowledge. It just says that, all things together, it is more important to believe the truth than to cling to the comforting falsehood. Which I fully endorse.
I don’t feel that Tarski says anything untrue the way that Gendlin does. It doesn’t say that believing the unfair world won’t hurt, or that you’re already enduring the knowledge. It just says that, all things together, it is more important to believe the truth than to cling to the comforting falsehood. Which I fully endorse.