Yes some people are better than others. They think outside themselves and appreciate the experience of others. — matt
The betters also apperciate everything revelatory as if it were significant. Hope can only lie in some kind of faith of truth and beauty. — matt
Better, greater and superior are all value statements and as such are subjective. — Harry Hindu
You and Sapientia seem to be in need of couple's therapy. — Bitter Crank
And just because we think some traits are better than other traits like having two legs to walk on rather than none; or having properly functioning eyes and ears; doesn't mean that the obvious next step is sending out the poison gas vans to despatch everybody who fails to be "better".
Some people fear that if we admit that some people are "better" than that means everybody who isn't better is worthless. Not so. For one thing, if you list all the traits upon which we might rate people, the list will be very long, and no one will be better at all of them. — Bitter Crank
The question is: Are some people better than others? The answer is simple (isn't it?) — Purple Pond
Yes, the answer is simple: judgements, assessments, evaluations, etc. are subjective. Therefore, people aren't objectively "better" or "worse"--you can't be correct/incorrect with regards to whether someone or something is "better" or not. — numberjohnny5
Regardless of whether or not your conclusion is true or false, it doesn't follow from that premise alone. So, do you have any missing premises? And, if so, can you reveal them? — Sapientia
(2) "better" or "worse" are judgements, assessments, evaluations, etc. — numberjohnny5
What makes one a better person and who decides? — Harry Hindu
But that isnt relevant to the title of the thread. Does being better at the 100 meters make you a better person? — Harry Hindu
Doesnt it depend on if one values running speed over other qualities? — Harry Hindu
If someone doesnt value making valid arguments (like yourself), then making valid arguments doesnt make one a better person. What makes one a better person and who decides? — Harry Hindu
And there we have it: the false missing premise. There's nothing stopping you from strictly using those words in that way, but that's not integral to their definition, nor are they always used like that. In fact, they're often not used like that, as when someone says something akin to my example. I do not mean to suggest that it is only my opinion that Usain Bolt is better than I am at the 100 metres. He really is, whether it's my opinion or not. — Sapientia
They're not judgements, assessments, evaluations, etc., because they are what we judge, evaluate, assess, etc. They're relational qualities, like larger, smaller, greater, etc. Whether the moon is bigger than my foot is not down to my judgement, assessment, or evaluation. It's down to objective criteria. — Sapientia
"They" are the objects that we judge, sure. I'm saying, ontologically, judgements etc. are mental though. Without minds comparisons and the like don't exist. Of course without minds some objects are bigger or smaller in size, for example. But there are no evaluations about that without minds. Measurements, standards, comparisons etc. is mental activity only. Criteria is subjective too. — numberjohnny5
But when I say that Usain Bolt is better than me at running the 100 metres, the judgement aspect is not as relevant as the truth aspect. — Sapientia
The truth is what answers the question. Pointing out that judgement and subject are involved does not answer the question. It doesn't do anything. — Sapientia
And criteria are not subjective, even if they require a subject to set them, which they don't in at least some cases. No one really needs to set the criteria for what makes the moon bigger than my foot. The criteria are predetermined, unless you change them to something else. — Sapientia
I view truth as mental too. — numberjohnny5
Maybe you mean "fact" by "truth"...? I use the conventional definition of "fact" as "states of affairs". — numberjohnny5
Also, when it comes to judgements etc., "relevance" is mental/subjective too. — numberjohnny5
I think you mean "fact" by "truth." — numberjohnny5
What actually are (as in, ontologically) criteria to you? — numberjohnny5
Bigger/smaller/faster/slower/etc. are comparative measurements of phenomena, right? Where in the world does the act of measuring occur? — numberjohnny5
I view truth as mental too. Maybe you mean "fact" by "truth"...? I use the conventional definition of "fact" as "states of affairs". — numberjohnny5
Bigger/smaller/faster/slower/etc. are comparative measurements of phenomena, right? Where in the world does the act of measuring occur? — numberjohnny5
I view truth as mental too. — numberjohnny5
Why? It's not. If a statement is true, then the truth is what the statement says. How is that mental? It isn't. — Sapientia
A fact is, or corresponds with, the truth. If it's a fact that the cat is on the mat, then the truth is that the cat is on the mat, and vice versa. — Sapientia
Or, better put, you're focussing on the map instead of the territory. — Sapientia
I've clarified what I mean, and it doesn't make that big of a difference whether we focus on truth or fact. — Sapientia
Determinants. They can be objective or subjective. — Sapientia
No, they're relational qualities between one thing and another. They're separable and independent from comparison or measurement. — Sapientia
Measuring is a thing that subjects or apparatus do. Measurements are what they give when they're done. It can be subjective or objective. — Sapientia
Both fact and truth are subjective, they both happen in the mind. — Sir2u
Truth and fact are descriptive of the events and objects of the external world. And the are both relative to point of view. — Sir2u
If I am in the north in winter and you in the south it will be summer. The sun Is way down south is what I would say but you would say no it is on top of us. If the sun was over the equator both statements, the sun is in the north and the sun is in the south are true at the same time. — Sir2u
We judge, measure, compare the objects in our minds, even if we take measurements with a ruler, the results are processed in the mind. — Sir2u
Exactly, the fact that you can measure 1km using a measuring device make no difference to the fact that both the km and the 1 only exist in the mind. As Plato said mathematics is what we use to describe the universe. — Sir2u
What about the collective mind? saving face, hive mind, group think. Don't they count for something? — matt
I don't know if I could definitively say if truth was subjective or objective. Is it possible that truth is beyond subjectivity/objectivity. — matt
If the OP intended the title to mean the way you interpreted it, it would say, "Are Some People Better Than Others At Certain Things?"That's not how the title is worded. That's just one interpretation of it. I interpreted it differently. It's down to the person behind the title to clarify its meaning. If the question is whether some people are better than others, as per the title and opening post, then my answer is yes, in some respects they are. Some people are better than others at the 100 metres, for example. — Sapientia
Exactly. That is why I said earlier, "It is nonsensical to ask a subjective question as if it had an objective answer."The question makes little-to-no sense outside of that context. — Sapientia
Because "truth" is an aspect of statements in which we make a judgement about things. Judgements are mental, something you agreed with in an earlier post. We say "the cat is on the mat" as a statement we believe to be true. Statements require meaning; statements refer to things. Meaning and reference are subjective, mental occurrences. What the statement is about can be a non-mental thing/event (i.e. the cat on the mat) (but it doesn't necessarily have to be non-mental either--it could be mental, e.g. making a truth-statement about your own mental experience). — numberjohnny5
A fact is, or corresponds with, the truth. If it's a fact that the cat is on the mat, then the truth is that the cat is on the mat, and vice versa.
— Sapientia
I wouldn't say that because the thing that is doing the corresponding (i.e. the thing that is making the reference) is the individual in question. People make statements about the facts, not the other way around. — numberjohnny5
I don't understand the analogy you're making re woods and trees. — numberjohnny5
But no, I'm trying to clarify and distinctify the difference between subjectivity and objectivity when it comes to judgments etc. (By the way, the way I use the terms, "subjectivity" just refers to the spatio-temporal location of minds; and "objectivity" refers to the spatio-temporal location of anything that are non-minds.) — numberjohnny5
Just because you believe you've clarified something doesn't mean the other person is clear on what you mean. That's the whole point of a commitment to conversing and arguing with others' perspectives/views. I get the impression that you don't care to help me understand your views better with a statement like that. — numberjohnny5
Anyway, I think it's important to acknowledge the difference between "fact" and "truth" because the meaning we have for those terms influences the conclusions we make, as well as helps us understand each other. That's what I'm interested in--I'm not interested in being right mainly because I don't think that's generally, in my experience, a good way to argue philosophically. And not many people generally tend to agree with me so I don't bother (i.e. I'm not too emotionally invested in) trying to convince them either. But I do think it's good practice and healthy to challenge my own views and others' views. — numberjohnny5
I'm still not clear what that entails. Looking up a dictionary definition yields this:
"a factor which decisively affects the nature or outcome of something."
Is that what you mean by "determinant"?
Also, what are your definitions for "objective" and "subjective"? We may be using them in different ways, which would add to miscommunication here. — numberjohnny5
(By the way, the way I use the terms, "subjectivity" just refers to the spatio-temporal location of minds; and "objectivity" refers to the spatio-temporal location of anything that are non-minds.) — numberjohnny5
I think we agree on that. — numberjohnny5
Another way of describing objects/things or facts (as events between things) is that, ontologically, there exist a variety of different stuff. What "makes" those things different are the particular properties they have relative to other things; maybe that's what you mean by "relational qualities." So while some objects are bigger than others ontologically, there is no comparison between "big" and "small" without minds. We make up a system of thought (like language, mathematics, etc.) that enables us to compare things with each other. — numberjohnny5
The act of perceiving, comparing, describing, measuring, judging etc. about that stuff is subjective (i.e. occurring in minds). When we say one object is bigger than another object and that matches/corresponds accurately to what we're referring to, that would be a true statement/judgement. — numberjohnny5
Another way of putting it is that relations exist and we make particular judgments about them. Some of those judgments can be true, and some false. — numberjohnny5
I agree, although again, I'm not sure how you're using "subjective or objective." — numberjohnny5
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