Nothing becomes truth until an ‘I’ certifies it. Before certification it is potential — a candidate waiting for a judge. The ‘I’ — the felt sense of being the one who knows, the self that stands behind all sensing, reasoning, and judging — is the irreducible condition without which nothing crosses from potential into truth. This is not a claim about how truths get discovered. It is a claim about what truth is. This paper traces the structure of truth from its most familiar form — intersubjective verification — backward through the Truth Lineage to its sensory foundation, and finally to the ‘I’: the entity that certifies all truth. It introduces three levels of truth: potential truth, personal truth, and shared truth. It argues that what we call objective truth is not truth independent of the ‘I’ — it is truth verified by a large enough network of ‘I’s converging independently. And it makes a distinction the field of mind and awareness has largely missed: the ‘I’ is the primary question, not awareness itself. Awareness is the light. The ‘I’ is the source. The paper concludes that the ‘I’ is the ultimate truth — not merely a condition for truth, but the living substance in which truth is constituted and held. Every proof is delivered to the ‘I’. Every question is asked by the ‘I’. Every truth is certified by the ‘I’. You are not proving the ‘I’. You are the proof.
Gevin Rishi (Wed,) studied this question.