is knowledge that corresponds to its object and is verified by practice.

: Exhaustive, final knowledge about an object that cannot be refuted. Example: "Man is mortal" or mathematical constants. 3. The Criterion of Truth

In the Social Studies curriculum, truth is divided based on its level of completeness:

The central concept of the lesson in 10th-grade Social Studies is the correspondence of knowledge to the object being studied. Truth is not just an opinion; it is knowledge that reflects reality as it exists outside and independent of our consciousness. 1. Definition and Key Features

The lesson teaches that is objective knowledge verified by practice , existing in both absolute (final) and relative (developing) forms.

: Truth is always tied to specific conditions, place, and time. For example, "Water boils at 100∘C100 raised to the composed with power C " is true only at standard atmospheric pressure. 2. Forms of Truth: Absolute vs. Relative

: New truths usually don't break fundamental scientific laws. 4. Truth vs. Error and Lie It is important to distinguish these three concepts: Truth : Correspondence to reality.