Some random 'truth' grouped by discipline:
Math:
Mathematics is explained by reduction of propositions to axioms.
There are no interesting consistent and complete axiom systems (recently discussed here by probabilistic approches).
Physics:
Dark matter exists.
The universe started with the big bang.
There is a universal arrow of time.
There is no cold fusion.
Chemistry:
Meteorology:
Biology:
DNA defines cell behavior.
DNA is the unit of inherited behavior.
Evolution on earth explains the origin of live on earth.
Medicine:
Vegetables are healthy.
Sport is healthy.
Death is inevitable.
Psychology:
Humans err/are fallible (recently mentioned in a Discussion).
Making humans overall (more) happy is good.
Linguistics:
Economics:
Markets are efficient.
Capitalism requires continuous economic growth.
Computer science:
RSA encryption is safe.
Concurrency is hard.
Sufficiently complex software neccessarily contains bugs.
Misc:
Disclaimer: I'm aware that questioning some of these borders on crackpotery (at least the physics ones are associated with crackpots). I didn't put too much energy into selecting them. I admit that I added/phrased some of these with an agenda. But don't assume that I advertize any negation except possibly in limited circumstances.
I suggest thinking about some condition for each of these where the 'truth' might not hold (and if it is in the Alice's sense of 'thinking about six impossible things before breakfast').
There are no interesting consistent and complete axiom systems (recently discussed here by probabilistic approches).
This depends pretty heavily on what you mean by interesting, since it requires something like being able to model Peano Arithmetic or at least Robinson arithmetic. But first order reals or first order C are "interesting" systems (in the sense that we study them and there are open problems that can be phrased in terms of them) and are consistent and complete.
New Salt Compounds Challenge the Foundation of Chemistry
The title is overblown (it depends on what you think the foundation is), but get a load of this:
And here's the philosophical bit:
The obvious example of local truth is relativistic effects being pretty much invisible over the durations and distances that are normal for people, but there's also that the surface of the earth is near enough to flat for many human purposes.
Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?