All examples of tautological, logical or empirical judgements. They are not really judgements at all but facts. So you haven't answered the question; I asked for an example of a philosophical or aesthetic judgement which could be intersubjectively corroborated by incontrovertible evidence. That the epistemological status of philosophical and aesthetic judgements are comparable to that of moral or ethical judgements and not to that of empirical or logical facts was the point. — Janus
You're right. — YuZhonglu
In America, the game is called "Clue." — YuZhonglu
A "fact" is just an opinion that a person is confident about. — YuZhonglu
Wow, yeah, I didn't realize we all had to bow to Imperial America and conform to American English. — NKBJ
Please don't respond to my threads anymore. — YuZhonglu
I'm afraid that will only make him worse. In the end, we have only this:
Don't feed the trolls! — Pattern-chaser
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