Sometimes. Suppose I have to jump across a river. If I doubt I'll make it, it's more likely I'll fall. Being confident can help me succeed. Really believing I'll succeed can help my belief come true.
But of course, this is a special case. You can't usually make something true by believing it. Not even if we all believe it. If we all believed we could fly and all jumped off a cliff together, we still all plummet to the ground.
Ouch.
Belief alone does not make something true. Truth is determined by objective facts and evidence, not by individual beliefs or perceptions. It is important to distinguish between personal beliefs and objective truth in order to make informed and accurate judgments about the world.
"Believing" means "trusting that something is true based on one's own appraisal of given evidence".
Illusions are created when something tricks the brain into believing something that isn't true.
Because people will make fun of you for believing in something you can not see. believing in Jesus takes faith. you need to believe without a shadow of a doubt.
"Believing" means "trusting that something is true based on one's own appraisal of given evidence".
"Believing" means "trusting that something is true based on one's own appraisal of given evidence".
"Believing" means "trusting that something is true based on one's own appraisal of given evidence".
hypothesis
They were but believed in, believing something does not make it fact.
Believing is like an action, it's like you believe in someone or something, For example you read a fact that says "Harry Potter is real" you are confident that it is true(something like that) Trusting is like you trust a person, and this person doesn't lie, cheat, and always true.
If you make something up, you create it from your imagination, you tell something that isn't true.
The word 'believing' is a noun form called a gerund, the present participle of the verb to believe. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Believing will not make it true. (noun)Her biggest mistake was believing him. (verb)It's amazing what you can sell to a believing public. (adjective)
A hoax is a deliberate attempt to dupe, deceive or trick an audience into believing, or accepting, that something is real, when the hoaxster knows it is not; or that something is true, when it is false.