the greatest problem is thinking there is a real problem to begin with. — Merkwurdichliebe
Facts about subjectivity are only subjective in the sense that they're facts about subjectivity. They're still objective in the sense that they're a fact. After all, subjects are just one kind of object: one with consciousness. — luckswallowsall
that there can be epistemically objective facts about ontological subjectivity. — luckswallowsall
"Epistemically objective" is an oxymoron. Knowledge can't be objective. Knowledge is necessarily mental. — Vessuvius
Knowledge has to be objective otherwise it's mere belief. — luckswallowsall
Knowlege is indeed necessarily mental ... but it's also necessarily objective. — luckswallowsall
That's simply another way of effectively saying, "We're going to consider argumentum ad populums 'objective.'" — Terrapin Station
What would be an "objective justification" in general? — Terrapin Station
g0d
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the greatest problem is thinking there is a real problem to begin with.
— Merkwurdichliebe
Well said. This is how I take my Heidgenstein. The old masters did deal with genuine life problems, though, I would say. So your critique applies to a certain kind of obsessive digression that happens when folks get lost in dictating an ideal language. — g0d
There is definitely a problem when people attempt to use the subject/object(subjective/objective) dichotomy as a means to account for everything. Banno finds it useful in certain situations. Those who attempt to do too much with it find themselves in an impossible situation. They cannot take account for that which consists of both, and is thus neither. Folk who do that create their own problems... those problems are the bottle. — creativesoul
Do you not think/believe that there are many self-perpetuated problems, all of which are a result of people becoming bewitched by certain language use? Frameworks are language use. Dichotomies are a part of all frameworks. Some dichotomies are used - historically - as a means for doing something that they are inherently incapable of doing. — creativesoul
Banno wants to continue/limit it's use, for/in/to some contexts I suppose, but I find it fatally flawed in such a way that it's use loses all explanatory value. It is inadequate for taking account of the attribution of meaning, the presupposition of correspondence to what's happened, and thought/belief formation itself. — creativesoul
Knowledge has to be objective otherwise it's mere belief. — luckswallowsall
Scientific facts and mathematical truths are examples of things that can be objectively known.
Knowlege is indeed necessarily mental ... but it's also necessarily objective.
Knowledge requires a combination of ontological subjectivity and epistemic objectivity.
An irrational fool has the ontological subjectivity but lacks the epistemic objectivity.
A rational robot has the epistemic objectivity but lacks the ontological subjectivity.
Your mistake is due to thinking that if something is ontologically subjective then it also has to be epistemically subjective. That's an equivocation on your part. — luckswallowsall
Say what? You're defining "objective" as "whatever one is willing to accept"? — Terrapin Station
There is definitely a problem when people attempt to use the subject/object(subjective/objective) dichotomy as a means to account for everything. Banno finds it useful in certain situations. Those who attempt to do too much with it find themselves in an impossible situation. They cannot take account for that which consists of both, and is thus neither. Folk who do that create their own problems... those problems are the bottle.
— creativesoul
Well I think I agree with you. To me the subject/object distinction indeed breaks down. But I even embrace naive realism as the mundane pre-philosophy from which we start and never actually leave.
I like OLP too. We never forget how to use subject and object talk in the real world, and we do it well. — g0d
It's when we try to do pseudo-math with essences that we get in hopeless tangles. — g0d
Meaning is more like a fluid that flows through both words and actions simultaneously. — g0d
I am interested in the related themes of truth as correspondence and truth as disclosure. To check that a proposition is true, we have to look at the world and see the already disclosed entity as that proposition described it. — g0d
When we talk about potatoes, we can just use our sense organs, etc. (along with an understanding of the world that operates noiselessly and makes the proposition intelligible.) But if I talk about other objects, like the correspondence theory of truth, I am disclosing them as I describe them. Or some of my statements intend to reveal them. It's only after entities are disclosed or revealed that we can have truth as correspondence. — g0d
I think naive realism is a name that carries along with it far too much philosophical baggage. — creativesoul
In philosophy of mind, naïve realism, also known as direct realism, common sense realism or perceptual realism, is the idea that the senses provide us with direct awareness of objects as they really are. Objects obey the laws of physics and retain all their properties whether or not there is anyone to observe them.[1] They are composed of matter, occupy space and have properties, such as size, shape, texture, smell, taste and colour, that are usually perceived correctly. — Wiki
It's when we try to do pseudo-math with essences that we get in hopeless tangles.
— g0d
I have no idea what this means. — creativesoul
Heiddy's take completely missed the most rudimentary forms, while attempting to draw a line between pre and post reflective thought/belief. Witt was too focused upon all the different ways we attribute meaning to notice his mistaken of following convention(epistemology) with regard to belief and it's content.
They both had their own bottle. — creativesoul
I'm not sure what the "but" is doing here. It's used as if you think that there's a remarkable difference between talking about potatoes and talking about truth, but the difference you see in unclear to me. — creativesoul
Are all things either objective or subjective? — Matias
Are all things either objective or subjective? — Matias
Yes. The two categories exhaust all existents. — Terrapin Station
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