The human brain is hardwired for basic survival in the African savanna and the primordial forests of Eurasia. It is not in any way evolved to cope with the complexities of reality, which is why only a miniscule percentage of the population ever even attempts to understand GR and QCD. Until one thinks in math rather than words, most concepts in physics are at best vaguely adumbrated.
We also need to remember that we use words in a very imprecise way. We think in terms of absolutes ("truth" "honor" "good" etc.) but in fact reality doesn't provide absolutes. So we're always running off into dead-ends, into intellectual errors, because we fail to realize our words are very poor instruments indeed. Which is why mathematics is the language of science and not words.
So perhaps it's better to spend the time acquiring the necessary tools with which to begin to apprehend the incomplete but still highly predictive theories we presently have, rather than fly after meaningless undefined words that almost certainly don't mean what we think they mean, because meaning itself is always relative to a specific context.