Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? And when he had said this, he went out again unto the Jews, and saith unto them, I find in him no fault at all.
We've all read about where Pontius Pilate and Jesus Christ met, and Pilate asked, "What is Truth?", where Christ made no answer, whereupon Pilate gave up and had to pass judgment. This is assuming it was a historical event where Christ was just a popular religious leader, and not a mythological event, and that probably is very likely.
I was thinking today that the Greek philosophers coined the phrase "What is (insert subject here)?" approximately in the year 400 BC - you can see examples of that in Plato's The Republic. The Judeo-Christian writers of the Pilate-Christ meeting that were unfamiliar with the Greek philosophers interpreted the phrase "What is Truth?" as a derisive sarcastic putdown into the biblical account, and this misinterpretation continues to this current day. Whereas a Grecian philosopher of that time would not have interpreted it as such, but as a genuine question demanding an accountable explanation. After all, Pilate was educated in the classical Greek philosophers. Hmmm.