Some of them can be aware of what other minds might be thinking. But setiing that aside, animals seem to me to manage to be objective about a lot of things. They certain manage to deal with the objective world in highly effective ways. They can make mistakes, a shadow is a predator, etc. But they are hardly purely subjective.Objectivity is a distinctively human trait, as only human beings have the capacity for objectivity. It involves the ability to shift perspective, and no one has ever attributed this to animals — Matias
They are really in the same kind of category of concepts. Objectivity would be a state or an outlook or perhaps even an unfolding of the use of certain tools over time. Truth seems to me as more to do with propositions.Truth and objectivity are not the same thing. — Matias
One can arrive at true theories in a non-objective way. Indeed, one can hit upon the truth purely at random. Conversely, objective theories are not necessarily true. — Matias
I don't think this is correct. Newtonians models were less true, ultimately, than Einstein's but they are still also quite true and are used for many things, given scale issues. They now know that ganglia are involved in intelligence and cognition also, not just neurons, but theories that put that all in terms of neurons are not completely false, they just were incomplete compared to current ones.Second, any attempt to assimilate objectivity and truth faces the difficulty that they behave in different ways. Note in particular that objectivity comes in degrees. One theory can be more objective than another, but a theory cannot be truer than another. — Matias
Objectivity is a distinctively human trait, as only human beings have the capacity for objectivity. It involves the ability to shift perspective, and no one has ever attributed this to animals. Objectivity requires us to stand back from our perceptions, our beliefs and opinions, to reflect on them, and subject them to a particular kind of scrutiny and judgement. Above all, it requires a degree of indifference in judging that may conflict with our needs and desires — Matias
Whereas truth is absolute and does not come in degrees, objectivity *only* comes in degrees. The idea of absolute objectivity is a misconception. encouraged by thinking of it as a view from nowhere.
What we are seeking to do in imposing standards of objectivity in our judgments in modern science is to identify and separate the informative and the uninformative, with a view to producing reliable results. — Matias
Indeed, but they seem to be related. When we say something is true, the full expression is "true of." You refer in your OP to,Truth and objectivity are not the same thing. — Matias
I think it worth qualifying here for present purpose, that "false" is better expressed as "no longer true." Or as true, as with Newtonian physics. That is, truth is a measure, objectivity the attempt to qualify and refine/adjust/correct the measure.The history of science provides plenty of examples of the objective formulation and defence of theories that have turned out to be false and have been replaced by other theories. — Matias
It's impossible to "stand back" from perceptions, beliefs and opinions. — Terrapin Station
I can assure you that it is possible. It is commonly called "critical thinking".
Some people practice it ( I am among them) and some are even good at it. — Matias
I never claimed that there "are no perceptions or beliefs", but you can question your beliefs (and if you are unable or unwilling to do it, other people can do it for you - that is the essence of science).
If you told me that you are never doing this, I would not believe this for a second. — Matias
OK, so you are taking offense at the metaphor "to stand back from X"? — Matias
How do you call it when you hold a belief and then it occurs to you "I could be biased or prejudiced or simply mistaken"? — Matias
Or do you never doubt or question any of your beliefs, judgements, perceptions? — Matias
What is your point? — Matias
The moment you decide to try to find out about X, you are trying to be objective, because your intention is directed towards an object. — Matias
The problem is that your sentences do not say anything that could in any sense be considered valid in the contect of my OP.The point of every sentence I type is just what that sentence says. — Terrapin Station
Think of subjective statements as value statements and objective statements as non-value statements. Subjective statements contain terms like, "good", "bad", "best", "worst", "right", "wrong", etc., while objective statements lack these terms. Subjective statements are basically a shortcut, or misuse, of language that projects one's preferences on objects - as if the noun in the statement possessed the quality that the subjective terms refer to rather than referring to the user's own preferences.Objectivity is a distinctively human trait, as only human beings have the capacity for objectivity. It involves the ability to shift perspective, and no one has ever attributed this to animals. Objectivity requires us to stand back from our perceptions, our beliefs and opinions, to reflect on them, and subject them to a particular kind of scrutiny and judgement. Above all, it requires a degree of indifference in judging that may conflict with our needs and desires — Matias
Can you give an example?Truth and objectivity are not the same thing. One can arrive at true theories in a non-objective way. — Matias
This is the problem of knowledge, not anything to do with objectivity vs. subjectivity.Conversely, objective theories are not necessarily true. The history of science provides plenty of examples of the objective formulation and defence of theories that have turned out to be false and have been replaced by other theories. Objectivity is no guarantee of truth, any more than truth can only be the outcome of objectivity. — Matias
What are we to make of this statement and all of your other statements, then? Are you making a truth claim here - that the idea that we are being guided towards the truth is wholly misleading? Are you misleading us with your statements, or are you trying to refer to some real state-of-affairs that is true from an alternate perspective - like one outside of everyone's minds (a view from nowhere) and looking at all minds objectively as if they all had the same property of being misled towards the truth?The problem with thinking of objectivity exclusively in general terms, as elimination of prejudice or bias, is that it encourages an absolutist view of objectivity. The prime example of such an absolutist conception is the view from nowhere.
There are two problems with this conception. First, the idea that we are being guided towards *the* truth is wholly misleading. — Matias
What is the difference between the "best answers" and the "truth"?What we are being guided towards are the best answers to the questions that we pose. — Matias
The problem is that your sentences do not say anything that could in any sense be considered valid in the contect of my OP. — Matias
You say that there is no objectivity, — Matias
Does that in any way invalidate my arguments in the OP? No. You are just deliberately misinterpreting them. — Matias
If it's all beliefs from top to bottom: what is the difference between these two beliefs?
(a) Grinded rhino horn is a remedy for erectile dysfunction
(b) AIDS is caused by the HI virus — Matias
What is the difference between the "best answers" and the "truth"? — Harry Hindu
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