Ask Osho!

What is the nature of truth in relation to journalism?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Truth is simple and quiet, while journalism thrives on sensation and scandal; to know truth, one must engage from within, not merely observe from the outside."

According to Osho, truth is simple, quiet, and unsensational—fit for a postcard, not for headlines. Journalism, driven by sensation and sales, gravitates to lies, exaggeration, and the negative; when facts don’t shock, they’re invented. Thus truth and journalism rarely meet. To know truth you must engage from the inside, participate, and drop the outsider’s gaze that hunts for scandal.
Truth is calm and ordinary, but news wants loud, shocking stuff—so it often ignores or twists the truth.
Why this matters practically
- Read news critically; notice sensational hooks and verify with multiple sources.
- Seek direct experience and deeper involvement to discover what’s true.
- Value the ordinary and positive that rarely become headlines.
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