That this text is written in English is not dependent on my own taste or feelings. Hence it is an objective truth. — Banno
Truth there can't have the property of being objective because the relation in question only obtains via an evaluation that an individual makes, based on how they assign meanings to the words/sentence in question, relative to what they're making the judgment with respect to--that is, a judgment about that meaning and its relationship to something else. Those are mental events, and hence on the definition of subjective as mental phenomena, we're talking about a subjective property, not an objective property. — Terrapin Station
Even if we agree, we might all be wrong. — Banno
I insist that every sentence is authored, and every author has perspective, so every sentence must have perspective. — Hanover
Yep. Because knowledge involves belief. But knowledge and truth are distinct.Knowledge from no perspective is incoherent. — Hanover
The simple test is whether we're talking about mental phenomena or not. — Terrapin Station
Every proposition has a mental perspective because propositions are meanings and meaning is a mental phenomenon. — Terrapin Station
To understand why I say that truth is subjective, one needs to understand how I define the subjective/objective distinction, and then understand my analysis of truth, which is based initially on standard notions of what truth is in analytic philosophy, and then understand my more controversial ontological analysis with respect to those standard analytic philosophy notions. A lot of people on the board aren't going to bother with all of that, because unfortunately we're often just not that interested in understanding others' views as their views--or "simply for the sake of understanding their views." — Terrapin Station
Words are used all sorts of ways, by all sorts of people. There might be an individual who uses "cat" to only refer to what most of us call "dogs," for example. Saying that the most common way to use a term is somehow "true" (or correct, etc.) by virtue of that fact is the argumentum ad populum fallacy. — Terrapin Station
Right. In other words, subjective statements are value statements. — Harry Hindu
Someone else said something similar. I don't think so. I think my preference is rather central to the issue, and hence the statement is subjective.Is it not a fact that Banno prefers vanilla ice to chocolate, regardless how anyone feels about that, including Banno? Is that not an attribute of Banno? — Harry Hindu
Is it not a fact that Banno prefers vanilla ice to chocolate, regardless how anyone feels about that, including Banno? Is that not an attribute of Banno?
— Harry Hindu
Someone else said something similar. I don't think so. I think my preference is rather central to the issue, and hence the statement is subjective. — Banno
in the context of ethics, it is a subjective fact that you judge murder to be wrong, and "murder is wrong" is unwarranted, because moral objectivism is unwarranted. You assert that the latter is a fact, but you fail to reasonably demonstrate it as such, so your assertion can be justifiably dismissed. — S
A bit out of left field, but OK.
I also claim to prefer vanilla ice over chocolate ice. Do you expect me to provide a warrant for that, too?
Perhaps it is wrong to insist that every true statement demands justification. — Banno
The mere fact that it is possible to hold the opinion in common makes it objective. — Merkwurdichliebe
By "the same thing" I include any intuition or phenomena that the observer experiences as a result of their mental state. So if we look at the same sky and disagree about tomorrows weather due to having had different past experiences, we aren't looking at the same thing by my definition. — sime
Suppose someone says "Only the sky we share before us is objective, and our private intuitions are subjective and irrelevant". This isn't a deep epistemological statement about the world we experience, this is merely a statement about a linguistic convention that ignores the private facts of each person. — sime
Too strong. Forget meaning -- look instead at what we do with words. — Banno
I can go by that interpretation. I can apply it. But, in ethics, it doesn't result in moral objectivism. — S
But now, I shall retract all that I've previously said due to the realization that there are 2 ways of regarding the object-subject relation. — Merkwurdichliebe
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