What to think of "subject(ive)" and "object(ive)"? |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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I totally agree that full objectivity is not possible, on the other hand, how could the mankind or even animals survive without certain degree of objective perception and understanding of the objective and subjective reality.
Edited by David_D - July 30 2023 at 08:52 |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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Good point, an opinion is necessarily subjective, according to the definitions presented here, but can also possess a certain degree of objectivity, if understood as correspondence to the objective or subjective reality. Edited by David_D - July 30 2023 at 08:55 |
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Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
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Yes.
No, it really can't. If I express an opinion ("Strawberry is my favorite fruit", "Tales from Topographic Oceans is a 10/10 album", "This boss battle is too hard"), what part of that is objective at all?
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David_D
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You disagree here because you use another definition of "opinion" than I do. I meant any statement, also like "Human hand has usually five fingers". |
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Stressed Cheese
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You don't use any accepted use of the word 'opinion' then. All opinions are statements, not all statements are opinions. In your world, what is the difference between an opinion and a statement then? Are they synonymous? If that's the case, you're directly contradicting your previous comment! Is there some difference here between the Danish and English languages that's causing you to confuse things?
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David_D
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These examples here, I might call "normative opinions", which are different from "descriptive opinions" expressing some points of view with pretensions of objective knowledge, like the one with the human hand. But it's a bit difficult for me with this "opinions" stuff, which word is best to use, due to my limited English knowledge. |
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Stressed Cheese
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I think you're confused with normative and descriptive statements. Terms that aren't that commonly used anyway, and have some limitations if I'm not wrong (I think they usually have to do with right/wrong/morality, which doesn't really apply to everything). If I had said "strawberries should be tasty", that'd be a normative statement. In English, opinions are usually expressed in the shape of statements. But not all statements are opinions. If I point out that humans tend to have 5 fingers, that's not an opinion.
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David_D
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Anyway, it's not just question of different languages but also of possible different epistemological positions.
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Lewian
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More than enough controversy is there to be found googling for objectivity in law, science, journalism. ...even in statistics, where I belong:
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moshkito
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Hi, That's close to the same thing. In reading something like Pasolini's "Heretical Empiricism", the majority of his discussion is how the different areas in Italy shaped their "own" language, and even the socio/political structure of theirs since, the "language" was often controlled by those in power. This, just about makes "epistemological" positions not only impossible, but also unreliable since it could be easily related to a sound, or mannerism of the culture, and not exactly something defined within the "language". It is a really difficult book to read that goes intensely into the depth of linguistics and its results ... and how some folks, writers and then later film makers, used it. It's only a "question of such and such" when we ASSUME that the area, or that country's collective government is the "rule" that defines the language and makes sure it is taught. We have to remember that "language" started eons ago from "sounds" and people eventually created words for those sounds. Thus, saying that it is about "different languages" is scary for me ... what makes the truth from the Mayans, or Aztecs, not true compared to the Buddhists or some of the Aramaic history? It leaves us, unfortunately, only with an "idea" of what subjective/objective is ... which really does not say much for a lot of languages. And history has been messed up so bad in translations that finding something that gives us a hint and some help is nearly impossible to locate ... not to mention that the translations are even worse!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Stressed Cheese
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Ok, thank you. I was looking at some stuff earlier and it kind of supports my point, which I guess is that in various fields, the term objectivity takes on a more specific meaning that doesn't pretend to be applicable to the word as a whole, but simply to a concept within the field. It reminds a bit me of how I (and others, don't remember who started using it) used the term validity a while back - not quite correctly and you corrected me on that IIRC. But as far as day-to-day usage and talking about things like music, objectivity and subjectivity is rather straightforward. What those concerned with, say, law, think of it is its own little corner, as it were.
Well, not really. This is just a case of not knowing the definition of certain words. I'm sorry if it sounds like I'm trying to lecture you, but there's a difference between having different points of view on something and just being wrong about how certain terms are used. |
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moshkito
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Hi, See above my discussion and mention of "Heretical Empiricism". David D is not likely to read anything that has more than 100 words or letters in it, I don't think. ... JK, of course! Heck, even in a thread about poetry, I posted one long one ... he couldn't even say ... too many words! (instead of too many notes! -- hahaha as in Amadeus)
Edited by moshkito - July 30 2023 at 12:56 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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David_D
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Okay, can you tell me where you find some epistemological definitions of "opinion" and "statement" - I haven't seen any. |
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suitkees
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Hmm, I don't think that the confusion between "opinion" and "statement" depends on epistemological positions, but just on the common use of language... I've seen in other threads that you confer a lot of value to the notion of objectivity, but you seem to want to apply it to things (opinion, perception...) that are by definition subjective - anchored in the human mind, the subject. Which leads me to the question, merely out of curiosity, David, since you started this philosophical topic: other than the internet pages you are referring to, have you dived into some philosophical literature to base your views on? The IEP article has an interesting bibliography at the end of which I would particularly recommend Richard Rorty's works Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature and Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth. His work is more based in Anglo-Saxon analytical philosophy tradition, which gives an interesting counterweight to some of the continental philosophers (and I already mentioned Nietsche, Husserl, Heidegger and Gadamer, which betrays that I'm more into continental philosophy). Gadamer's Truth and Method is a seminal work in contemporary philosphy on some of the questions you raise here. Easier to read, more recent and somewhat in the line of Gadamer's work are Gianni Vattimo's writings, and I'm especially thinking of Beyond Interpretation and A Farewell to Truth. The title of the latter might make you frown. It has a link to my quote of Nietsche earlier and his statements that "there are no facts, but only interpretations" and "the true world has in the end become a fable". This, I think, provoked rdtprog's reaction that implicitly (I think, but he may correct me if I'm wrong) referred to the relativism or even nihilism this may lead to. Somehow, Nietsche - and Kant to a lesser extent - is at the beginning of a paradigm shift in thinking about these kind of notions of objectivity, truth, knowledge... When Nietsche declared "God is dead" it wasn't so much a stance against religion (he was an atheist anyway, so God would never have existed and could thus not be dead either), but about the end of the metaphysical certitudes ("truths") that religion - and the positivist sciences - had provided sofar. He was not praising nothingness, but rather claiming that we would need a new frame of reference to build our truths on: Nietsche's nihilism was rather a questioning of the established values and, in extension, through Heidegger, Gadamer and Vattimo, the basis of considering the essence of truth as an interpretive one. To quote Vattimo on this, in The Transparent Society:
And in a continuation of that and as a reaction to a point moshkito expressed earlier:
Now, I understand that some might not accept that "truth" and "objective knowledge" don't have a clear monolithic - metaphysical - frame of reference (a dogma), but is rather grounded in this multiplicity of narratives about the world that we create ourselves and that this would be constitutive of "truth", and that some are afraid of relativism or even nihilism, but I think this is part of the challenges of our world today: to accept that knowledge and truth are human creations that have not just one single frame of reference but multiple ones, of our own creation. This is not about "nothingness" but about challenges of conceiving the world, and our "Being-in-the-world" (to use a Heideggerian notion) not through "objective knowledge" but by accepting that this knowledge - and thus the reality of our world - is an interpretive one. Edited by suitkees - July 30 2023 at 13:53 |
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progaardvark
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I don't know.
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Lewian
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^^The hard problem for I guess all or most of us is at the same time to realise how problematic any concept of objectivity and truth actually is, and still to not give all the fakers, snake oil salesmen, and conspiracy theorists a free pass by implying that everything somehow has the same validity.
Edited by Lewian - July 30 2023 at 14:26 |
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Gerinski
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Some seem to confuse objectivity with necessary truth. They are not necessarily equal.
To put some example in our context, and the discussion where it all started: The statement "Sgt Peppers might have influenced ITCOTCK" is an objective statement, regardless if it's actually true or not that the former did influence the latter. While the opposite statetement "ITCOTCK might have influenced Sgt Peppers" is obviously neither objective nor true. It's at most an opinion, and an objectively wrong one. In my usage of the language (and remember I'm not a native English speaker), an opinion is usually subjective but not necessarily so, it can be rooted in an objective fact, such as if I say "I think that Rick Wakeman live keyboards work in the 70s had more sound versatility than Ray Manzarek's with The Doors, thanks to using several more different keyboards". This may sound as an opinion, but it is objectively true that Manzarek played all of his parts only on a Vox or Gibson organ plus a Rhodes Piano Bass, while Wakeman used several other keyboards including Hammond (itself much more versatile than the Vox or Gibson), more than one Mellotron with different sounds, RMI Electra-Piano, more than one Minimoog set with differemt sounds, Hohner Clavinet... Edited by Gerinski - July 31 2023 at 04:09 |
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Stressed Cheese
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I'm not really the best person to ask, and besides, I don't think you'll find every word explained in that sense. It doesn't matter anyway, because as I said, the problem here doesn't lie in this area...you're not going to find any definitions of the words opinion and statement where they are synonymous with another.
A lot of opinions are based on (things people percieve as) facts, but that doesn't make the opinion any less subjective. Also, these two sentences:
are contradictive. |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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Yes, I've studied quite a lot of philosophy and especially epistemology, but it has also been many years ago even I've read some books once in a while since. Anyway, I don't expect the discussions here to be on academical level, as it would be nice if not so few could join them. |
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rdtprog
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It's funny how people get lost in definition coming from thinkers that
don't talk about their own being but the views of other thinkers. You
learn in school not how to think but how people are thinking.
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