There is no "consensus" — 180 Proof
Well, what are the differences between objectivity and intersubjectivity?
— TheMadFool
As pointed out above, the difference is that the latter is socially constructed and the former ineluctably precedes as well as exceeds (though doesn't necessarily exclude) social construction.
re: 'objective' ...
By objective I denote subjectivity [perspective, consensus (intersubjective), language, gauge]–invariance e.g. arithmetic, gravity, boiling point of water, species functional defects of humans, etc.
— 180 Proof
re: 'intersubjective' ...
Well, an objective X, as I discern it, is intersubjectivity-invariant, that is, 'group consensus' (whether aware or unaware) does not 'socially construct' (affect) X – it's there, or how it is, no matter what an individual or group 'believes' or accepts or does not (yet) know about X, like e.g. gravity or what harms all species-members, etc.
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
I don't understand the question. — 180 Proof
totally irrelevant to the scientific study of psi. — Wayfarer
So... we done or are we gonna go back to argue? — khaled
There are 4 dimensions with time being only one of them. You would need another temporal dimension for time to curve into. — noname
Something CAN be intersubjective and also objective.
Not in this case.
I did not say "whatever is intersubjective is objective". — khaled
Gravity affects spacetime not ""space". — Metaphysician Undercover
How so? I find that unlikely since I'm the one that introduced it — khaled
No because I think morality is ONLY intersubjective. It is only based on agreement. It is not "out in the world" like a rock is. It's not written in stone (metaphorically) somewhere. Do you also think so? — khaled
statistical methods — Wayfarer
Something can be intersubjective and also objective — khaled
First, which definition? If everyone agrees that something is moral does that make it objective? Or is it a bit more than just agreement?
Is it possible for everyone to simultaneously think that something is wrong and it be right anyways and vice versa? If so, then what is the method you use for determining what is moral? — khaled
This would only argue that we have common intuitions about morality. Is that the same thing as having an objective morality?
And what of the cases where someone has intuitions that don’t match the majority? I think all of us have a few of those. What do we do about them? — khaled
Like they say, The greatest trick that the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he doesn't exist. — baker
No thanks, I had cereal! — counterpunch
Right, but the configuration doesn't exist of itself; it exists as a configuration of three balls, a pen drive, a brain. What's at issue here, ultimately, is this:
"Elementary particles, time, genes and the brain are manifest to us only through our measurements, models and manipulations. Their presence is always based on scientific investigations, which occur only in the field of our experience."
If that's the case - how do we know we're not just brains in jars, being fed sensory data we mistake for reality? How do we know we're not in the Matrix? If we assume we are not in the Matrix, we have to assume the primacy of the objective, if only on the basis of the chronology of the question. Consciousness evolved from inanimate matter. If consciousness is subjective - where did it come from? The spirit realm? — counterpunch