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The Münchhausen Trilemma: Why Absolute Truth is a Logical Impossibility

Are we entirely sure of anything we claim to know? When we strip away our daily assumptions and dig into the absolute bedrock of human reason, we discover a terrifying void where our certainty should be. This is the domain of the Münchhausen Trilemma, a philosophical trap demonstrating that absolute, objective proof is logically impossible.

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Named after a fictional Baron who claimed to pull himself out of a swamp by his own hair, this epistemological problem states that every time we try to justify a truth, we are forced into one of three dead ends: an endless infinite regress, a closed circular loop, or a sudden, dogmatic halt where we simply say, “Because I said so.” Beneath our towering skyscrapers of physics, ethics, and logic, there is no solid ground; human knowledge is a magnificent, floating architecture.

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