It's an internal negation of subjectivity for the individual, but an objective fact filtered through human perception demands more observers than one and that all those individual observers try and disregard their own subjectivity. — Christoffer
Woah woah woah slow down...
An objective fact filtered through human subjectivity... No... The subjectivity would be the fact: there is no objective fact.
Furthermore, an objectivity is not a disregarding of subjectivity but a labeling of it as bereft of a social utility.
The physical world is what it is, with or without us, — Christoffer
Supposedly...
Those conclusions can never be subjective, therefore objectivity is something outside of our perception. — Christoffer
Not only is the implicated non-sequitur, the implier is wrong. Predicting the world and the events in the world is based on subjective experience, not an objectivity. I know the sun will come up tomorrow not because of an objectivity but because of something that can be understood by consciousness (of) the world. Rendering 'subjectivity' incapable is absurd.
Not that there even is a subjectivity...
If you can predict how matter is going to behave, you are acting on facts about the world that exists outside of your subjective perception. — Christoffer
You call it matter. I call it experience of the world. These are atop two completely different, incommensurable epistemologies... And I think the epistemology that deals with 'matter' is exclusionary and devoid of human meaning.
But in order for science and communication to work practically for us, we need a measurement that balance our subjectivity with what we perceive as objectivity — Christoffer
Or just throw into the trashcan this idea of subjectivity versus objectivity...
And this is what absolute objectivity is about. — Christoffer
Socrates was not talking about not knowing anything about an objectivity. True knowledge is knowing that you know nothing... Knowing nothing... Not not knowing anything... But knowing the truth of being, of consciousness; and knowing everything else is an illusion--all that is truly known 'IS' nothing.
We call it objective since it predicts and behaves according to the world that exists outside of our perception and will long after the subjective viewpoint has died. — Christoffer
It is called objective because it more so resembles an object of our perception that is SEEMINGLY independent and representing some hidden being that is incapable of being apprehended by consciousness. This is a lie.
It is called objectivity in order to denote a transpersonal reference point by which a mundane authority can materialize.
This authority is meaningless.
The goal should be an interchangeable consciousness realizing that conscious is (of) the world.
What can be known by a consciousness transcends any representation of what is known, and has primacy over these representations.
For instance... Those objectivity-ists say that perhaps there is some objective meaning and conflate meaning with purpose or vice versa saying that the purpose of life is to reproduce. This is an absolute disgrace to human intelligence. Why? Because it labels subjectivity as insufficient with regard to an absolute authority.
all the quality of life that we have around objects that humans have invented is based on the understanding of how these objects work. The practical objective understanding of the world, makes people able to form it — Christoffer
No... Objectivity is a representation. It is secondary to experience. It is a replacing of experience for the more, perhaps, 'manageable.' But there is absolutely nothing more manageable than finding one's own existential meaning and priority in life, as opposed to becoming some scientific dilettante seeking absolutely nothing.
The greatest scientific discoveries were influenced by an interest in one's own experience, not by the objective classification of what is real as opposed to what is not.
something that has reduced or erased subjectivity — Christoffer
This would be impossible by virtue of the definition of what would be a subjectivity.
But again, I do not like this dualism Descartes has so cleverly coerced people into unconsciously adopting.
And this is absolute objectivity, which I do not dispute, I'm arguing for a measurement of objectivity that is practical for us as humans, since absolute objectivity is in most regards meaningless for us. — Christoffer
Why keep the word objectivity?