>>13267173Binary truth does make sense. I would say the biggest problem is quantifying ideas.
Say, the sun will rise over the horizon at my location in exactly 12hrs. And it does. Then binary truth is good here. It would be a 1 or 0 input for truth.
Say, there is a man who has been beaten down, made wrong decisions, commited crimes and institutionalized. Recovered to normalcy, then framed for a crime he didn't commit. His job would be to create as many vectors as he can to prove innocence. More decisions to decide what is true.
There's 100-500 factors a court must consider before making an accurate judgment on his fate. The court is a computer, and each factor must be 1 or 0'd.
For a human, this is a complicated situation. It doesn't immediately make sense.
The courts job is to properly quantify each idea into a factor then binary decision that factor. De-cide. To kill a path. To choose another.
Binary truth is logical. Because it is a method of quantifying an idea to the simplest factor possible. Something or nothing.