“Truth” and “accuracy” are just words, and there is no inherent difference between them.
That said, if you wanted to assign useful meaning to the two, you could use truth as a noun to describe the condition of belief matching reality, and accuracy as an adjective to refer to the place of a condition on a scale of proximity between belief and reality.
Or, you could use them the other way around.
Or, you could use both words as nouns in one context, and adjectives in another. This is usually the case, with accuracy more likely to be used as an adjective as it implies lack of confidence to some degree.
“Truth” and “accuracy” are just words, and there is no inherent difference between them.
That said, if you wanted to assign useful meaning to the two, you could use truth as a noun to describe the condition of belief matching reality, and accuracy as an adjective to refer to the place of a condition on a scale of proximity between belief and reality.
Or, you could use them the other way around.
Or, you could use both words as nouns in one context, and adjectives in another. This is usually the case, with accuracy more likely to be used as an adjective as it implies lack of confidence to some degree.
That wasn’t helpful.
I answered your question. You should rephrase it if you want to learn something else.
And what CronoDAS really meant was
“What is the difference between truth and accuracy?”, I suppose?