Don Quixote once said, “Facts are the enemy of truth” in a musical based on Cervantes’ Don Quixote called Man of La Mancha. If one defines truth as what we want to believe in and view as compatible to us and facts as a small element of reality as construed by an individual, then the following statement by Quixote is valid. Throughout history and science, facts consistently appear, but unprocessed facts are truth’s opposition. A person’s facts can also be fatally misrepresented when taken out of context. In the end, any person ends up believing what fits well with their personality. Facts do not only reveal pieces of a truth, but they only represent a small fraction of a principle in its whole. All throughout history and science, facts support a widespread understanding towards any certain circumstance. Scientific facts are complex in their nature, and when taken literally, they deceive us from the truth behind it. Without knowing the background information relating to a fact, one cannot make an explicit conclusion about something. In order to create an educated postulation about a revelation, one must examine behind the fact. All audiences focus on the aspect of the truth over time as truths broaden. Scientific explanation is not appealing in a factious state, but when the truth leaks, it catches the attention of all its readers. The truth may never be revealed without looking into the background of a fact. Such an example is during trials in court. Lawyers attempt to convince the jury with tricky facts that create doubts within the minds of the people serving on the panel. If the facts are convincing enough, the lawyers will never have to depose the real truth behind what they stated as their factual evidence. The truth conceals within history and will never meet the minds of the jurors of the trial. In result, unprocessed “facts are the enemy of truth” and often digress the conventional mind away from the actual truth c