The problem with discussing whether something is subjective or objective is that there are not always clear lines between between these two concepts. — Sam26
An objective fact, for example, is that which is mind-independent. — Sam26
I will never not take joy in pointing out that 'objective' used to mean exactly the opposite, and that for the Scholastics, that which was objective was that which existed for - and only for - a mind: — StreetlightX
Fred believes that common salt is composed of chlorine and sodium.
again, making propositional attitudes central. — Banno
But are you looking for some everyday meaning - when everyday meanings are never sharply demarcated anyway? Or are you seeking a well-founded philosophical distinction? In which case clearly it is the metaphysical-strength claims the words might invoke that are in contention. You can't avoid that by some kind of ordinary speech manoeuvre. — apokrisis
that we should at least be able to agree upon a working definition of what the concepts subjective and objective means. — Sam26
Rather than the mind receiving the truths of the outer world into its inner world, minding is about forming embodied and adaptive points of view. Mindfulness is the larger thing of that relation in action. — apokrisis
Why? Without some conceptual motivation to which the distinction responds to, it's just an arbitrary excercise. — StreetlightX
Wasn't Wittgenstein trying to dissolve issues like solipsism by arguing for the necessary public nature of language? — Marchesk
and an archetype of a subjective statement:
Fred believes that common salt is composed of chlorine and sodium. — Banno
What concerns? And why are you concerned to begin with? — StreetlightX
What concerns? And why are you concerned to begin with? — StreetlightX
Same concerns humanity has had since the ancient schools of philosophy in India, China and Greece, if not earlier. — Marchesk
The subjective/objective distinction didn't even exist until the 18th century or so, — StreetlightX
5-3 Pros ti:
Arguments from relativity. X only ever appears such-and-such in relation to the subject judging and to the things observed together with it. Suspension on how X really is follows. — https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/skepticism-ancient/#SkeIdeEarClaGre
Sextus describes the skeptic’s states of ‘being-appeared-to’ as affections of the mind. A skeptic can report these states in their utterances. Illustrating this point, Sextus uses expressions associated with the Cyrenaics, a Socratic school of thought. These expressions literally mean something like ‘I am being heated’ or ‘I am being whitened.’ They aim to record affections without claiming anything about the world.
Why? Without some conceptual motivation to which the distinction responds to, it's just an arbitrary excercise. Kant, Scotus, and Poinsot all had a set of conceptual motivations which made their employment of the terms non-arbitrary. In the absence of this, its just a trivial bit of language wringing. Linguistic engines on idle. — StreetlightX
Concepts like subjective and objective aren't arbitrary concepts. — Sam26
These are all objectively true or false. They're all claims about an individuals belief's (their brain states) and can all be determined (in principle) as true or falseand an archetype of a subjective statement:
Fred believes that common salt is composed of chlorine and sodium. — Banno
Or, Fred feels like it's hot in the car, Jill thinks it's cold, but Raymond feels just right.
Or, Fred believes the salt is poison from his partner, who is an alien doppleganger.
Or, Fred dreams the salt is a bunch of tiny elves cranking his taste buds.
Or, Fred is convinced that salt is no more than how it appears to him. — Marchesk
One of the definitions I use when referencing what's an objective fact, for example, is that which is mind-independent. This definition doesn't cover every use of the word, but generally covers a large swath of uses. — Sam26
This still doesn't dissolve the distinction. It just redifines objective and subjective into adaptive points of view versus the world itself. — Marchesk
Sam’s problematic revolves around objective validation of something which can only ever be known first-person — Wayfarer
I didn't say they were. I said attempts to give them substance in the absence of any conceptual motivation would make them so. The OP is one such attempt. It is preferable that people disagree on the use of terms when motivated by different problematics, than trivially agree on such uses without being productively constrained by a need to address a well-founded set of issues. — StreetlightX
These are all objectively true or false. They're all claims about an individuals belief's (their brain states) and can all be determined (in principle) as true or false — ChrisH
However, my problem is that we shouldn't just arbitrarily pick meanings out of thin air, that there is a general consensus of correct use among concepts. — Sam26
Arbitrariness by consensus is still arbitrariness. — StreetlightX
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