Does absolute truth exist, no.
Thank you for replying to my questions. I have to say, however, that I think maybe some atheists haven't really thought this through. The belief that absolute truth does not exist is self-defeating. If your assertion, "Absolute truth does not exist" is actually true, it would itself
be an absolute truth. And obviously if it's an absolute truth, then it is self-contradictory and false. Think about it.
Truth is a human construct, it is simply an unreachable end goal that we strive for to better understand the world around us through our perceptions.
Wow, I don't know how you can say that. I've heard many atheists say that they believe morality is a human construct, but even hard-core atheists I've encountered don't believe that truth itself is a human construct. The universe exists, it's not a human construct, are you going to claim that the universe around us is a figment of our imaginations and doesn't really exist? You yourself exist, that is a truth. You didn't make that truth up. So, unless I've misunderstood your point, what you said is nonsensical.
We can employ the use of the scientific method to increase clarity of our understanding by running repeatable and falsifiable experiments; however, even if a hypothesis ever achieves the status of theory, it can always alter overtime through the self-correcting nature of the scientific method. We can determine fragments of truth under certain conditions, which does not allow them to be applied to areas outside of their confines that absolute truth would allow.
You can't even begin the scientific process without certain truths being in place, that science itself cannot prove. I'm talking about A Priori truths, which are self-evident. The scientific method is only
one way of determining truth. The big mistake that I see atheists make is to think that science is the ONLY way to know truth. And what I think it funny is that atheists love to proudly proclaim science as the be-all end-all determiner of truth, and anything that science can't prove doesn't exist (Ok, maybe not all atheists are like that, but many are) and what they don't even realize is that science itself is rooted in certain philosophical truths that are outside the realm of science. They come first. So you atheists have faith without even realizing it.
And since immaterial things are all supernatural I wouldn't believe that absolute immaterial things exist. Sorry but it's a bit ridiculous as the question presupposes that I'd believe in something immaterial. If it was immaterial we could not observe it and therefor we could never know it exists. And being supernatural means it is not of this natural world. Again something unobservable. Whatever exists in this world is natural and has material form. And don't jump and say that is an absolute truth, as with anything i could never state i know something absolutely does not exist, it all relies under the constraints of our perceptions. But it is also laughable to claim something exists in absence of material form when it cannot be observed.
There are lots of things that are immaterial. I could list a whole bunch of things, but I want to talk about something in particular, that I think most atheists believe in. At least the ones who always say that "atheism is logical" and that belief in God is "illogical."
Do you believe that logic exists? (Other atheists here can answer this too, of course) Are you going to maintain your previous point that no absolutes exist, by stating that logic is not absolute? And where would you say that logic comes from?
We are only able to make sense of this world because it is observable. Anything else is incomprehensible and if it is put into words it must become material. Any argument that insists on the immaterial simply is projecting the natural world onto the concept. Ever wonder why the gods of religions across the world exhibit human or animal appearances and human traits such as expressing emotion and goals? If they were truly separate from the natural material world why then do they exhibit what is observable?
I already covered this. See above.
Perception is also not an absolute truth, it is simply what we have to work with.
Of course perception and truth are not the same thing. But we
can know that truth exists, and to claim that it does not, or that we cannot know is self-defeating and illogical.