Why shouldn't the sharing bring the aspect into being, as it where - the child learns the aspect in the process of learning to talk in a certain way. A child does not have a notion of "four" in its mind that it learns to match up with the word "four"; it learns what four is by moving beads, colouring squares and using the word. — Banno
When we find evidence that we're not all the same it's a little jarring. — frank
In other words, as you take into account more and more different perspectives, as your intersubjectivity gets more and more comprehensive, you get closer and closer to objectivity, and "at infinity", i.e. if you could ever perfectly account for absolutely every perspective, that would be objectivity. — Pfhorrest
SO tell me, if the word choice is insignificant, why "intersubjective" rather than "objective" or even "shared"? — Banno
If you only care about that which can be put into words, — SophistiCat
et alia;Because it describes very precisely what happens. — Olivier5
Why shouldn't the sharing bring the aspect into being,
— Banno
Makes the whole world be conjured into being by us inhabiting it together. — fdrake
SO tell me, if the word choice is insignificant, why "intersubjective" rather than "objective" or even "shared"? — Banno
What is it that is subjective in our observations of the cradle? — Banno
Perhaps an example: each of us observes, say, a Newton's Cradle. The supposition is that we each have our own private sensations, which we then translate into a description of the way the cradle moves, put into words and find that we agree on the words used... is that the idea? — Banno
Thanks for responding.Each unique perspective is not, cannot be, shared. — Janus
You don't know that the cradle appears exactly the same to both of us. — Janus
Intersubjectivity is a very useful concept, especially in philosophy of science, in that it bridges the gap between subjectivity and objectivity.It explains how we build some extent of objectivity NOT by deleting the observer (the subject) but on the contrary, by ADDING other observing subjects and comparing MANY subjective observations. — Olivier5
...because you already learned to use "sharp" and "stabbing"... — Banno
What is it that is not shared? Take the example of Newton's cradle, for instance. Do you agree with ?Seriously though, I think it's possible there could be both private and shareable aspects of subjectivity. We can use language to share some aspects, but other aspects cannot be shown or otherwise shared. — Luke
The difference between objectivity and subjectivity is that information about location relative to the body is absent in an objective view (ie. a view from nowhere vs. a view from somewhere). — Harry Hindu
Why, then you do not mention the fact that each individual observer is necessarily subjective and therefore fallible. The reason one needs more than one observer is thus obscured, it's not explicit anymore.I want to understand what is added by the word subjective: compare the following to what you said above:
It explains how we build some extent of objectivity NOT by deleting the observer but on the contrary, by ADDING other observers and comparing MANY observations.
I've dropped the word "subjective"; what difference did it make? — Banno
then you do not mention the fact that each individual observer is necessarily subjective and therefore fallible. — Olivier5
fallible because it is subjective? But that's not right. Let's look at something really subjective - that pain in your toe, for example. You cannot be wrong about that; it's one of the few places were certainty is certain... — Banno
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