Ok. This is going nowhere. — ChrisH
If you genuinely don't understand that "I like X" is not the same claim as " X is likeable", then I'm afraid it's you that's confused.I don't know if you're trolling or if you're really that confused. — Terrapin Station
If you genuinely don't understand that "I like X" is not the same claim as " X is likeable", then I'm afraid it's you that's confused. — ChrisH
As if anyone wrote anything resembling "Those are the same claim." — Terrapin Station
So if liking something isn't a judgment about it in your view, I have to wonder what the heck definition you're using of "judgment," and re something like "Anchovies are delicious," it's not a fact that the person who stated that thinks that anchovies are delicious? — Terrapin Station
You could feed me anchovies, and I could say ‘yum’, hundreds of times, whilst actually hating them. Whereas there’s no way I could lie about being 6” tall. — Wayfarer
As I said, the veracity could (in principle) be determined (given a sufficiently advanced method of brain scanning). — ChrisH
"I like anchovies" isn't a judgment any more than "I am 6 feet tall" is a judgment. They're both straightforward factual claims which are (in principle) objectively verifiable. — ChrisH
Quite honestly I don't care if you want to call it a judgment. The fact remains that it is objectively verifiable (in principle) and is therefore not subjective.It's a claim about how the speaker feels about x. That is indeed telling us something about the speaker. But it's a judgment--how one feels about something is a judgment. I spelled this out above. — Terrapin Station
No it isn't."Anchovies are delicious," likewise, is a claim about the speaker. — Terrapin Station
Quite honestly I don't care if you want to call it a judgment. The fact remains that it is objectively verifiable (in principle) and is therefore not subjective. — ChrisH
No it isn't.
If it were, it would make no sense for anyone to disagree with a claim of "X is delicious". According to you, they'd be denying that the speaker actually did find X to be delicious! — ChrisH
If you accept that the veracity of a claim such as "I like X" can be verified objectively in principle, then you must accept that it is an objective claim. — ChrisH
If you insist that claims such as "X is delicious" are synonymous with "I like X" then you have to accept that such statements are objective. — ChrisH
Again, re verifiability, it just depends on exactly what we're referring to as a verification of something whether verifications are necessarily mental or not. I'd say that verifications would be mental, because I don't think that "verification" makes much sense, or resembles the common usage of that term, if we're not talking about something with meaning attached. — Terrapin Station
All I'm saying is that "I like X" is true or false independent of anyone else's opinion or feelings. This is what it means to be objective. Whether or not the veracity of the claim is actually verifiable in practice is irrelevant. — ChrisH
and it's not a standard way to use that term. — Terrapin Station
The standard way to use the term is to refer to things that are independent of anyone's mind (and not just their opinions or feelings, but their minds period). — Terrapin Station
expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations — Merriam-Webster
No this has nothing to do with agreement. The point is that there is a fact of the matter regardless of what anyone can know or agree upon.So maybe you're using a shade of that colloquial idea in "there are objective facts about minds/attitudes"? In other words, if Joe likes anchovies, then everyone can know/we can all agree that it's a fact that Joe likes anchovies. — Terrapin Station
You're making the mistake I mentioned earlier.Well, there isn't a fact regardless of what the person who likes anchovies can know, is there? — Terrapin Station
If you take this view then you disqualify the posibility of making any objective claim about the existence of mental states/attitudes. — ChrisH
If you'd said this earlier then you could have saved us both a lot of time.And I would say that no claims are objective, by the way. And that's the case even if you're using this definition: "expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations." It's not possible to make a claim, or to think anything, that's not subject to personal interpretations, a fortiori because you can't make (or read, or understand) a claim with no meaning associated with it, and meaning is a type of personal interpretation. — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.