Truth means that which is intimately connected to all that is honest, what is real, and the absence of lie.
Truth is also the affirmation of what is right, what is surely right and is within the presented reality.
The truth is often discredited and skepticism is the disbelief or disbelief of the truth. An individual who has a constant predisposition to doubt the truth is called a skeptic.
When people or groups try to prove that they are interested in subjects, but they don't really like it, or don't understand it, they are called pseudo, meaning they are not true. Ex: pseudo-Catholic, pseudo-intellectual, pseudo-canonical, etc.
The truth of facts is of great importance in judging human actions. When a truth leaves doubts, it is essential to verify its veracity, which may or may not incriminate an individual.
A truth can be demonstrated without being recognized as true because it is not very clear. It is said that it is a postulate, as it still needs proof to arrive at the real truth.
For the philosophical current known as relativism, truth is relative, that is, there is no absolute truth that applies on a general level. Thus, the truth may apply to some people and not to others, as it depends on each person's perspective and context.
The absolute truth is the one that is true all the time and everywhere. What is true for one person is true for everyone. Ex: Everyone needs air to breathe. People cannot live in the past and the future at the same time.
truth and philosophy
One of the characteristics of human beings is the permanent search for the truth, the desire to prove the truth from the facts and to distinguish the true from the false and which often puts us in doubt about what was trained. The search for the truth arises from childhood and throughout life, we are always questioning the truths established by society and philosophy has its greatest value in investigating the truth.