Economics: What is Value? Defining value in terms of the willingness of people to spend is also stupid. That's why we say that the market overvalues or undervalues things - because we have a real value in mind. You say Bitcoin is a bubble. Why? Because you have some idea of the price it ought to have in mind. That real value obviously cannot be calculated by the willingness of people to spend - people can be idiots. — Agustino
That's cause you don't comprehend what "subjective" really means, besides its common-sense definition. Insofar as subjective properties are concerned, a subjective property is such that no proper conception of how a thing X possesses it can be supplied except in terms of how, under appropriate conditions, such a thing affects a sentient being, a subject. In this way, there is no reason to think that opinions, for example, are subjective, unless in the case of being led by an enormous confusion with the common sense, i.e., to equate "personal" with "subjective". Having clarified this, nothing that is subjective can turn out to be objective. And then, to claim something subjective of common defense to be intersubjectivity is to confuse two different senses of subjective. Only what an object produces in a subject (qualia, for example) can be subjective. Never intersubjective (unless we share our consciousness), so that the intersubjective concerns what exists because of the complex relationships between various subjects. It is also necessary to say, perhaps, notwithstanding that it is not the relations of common defense, to base a subjective idea, which is to make this same idea intersubjective, to be, in fact, a similar idea and not of exact same or common defense: however, it is quite simple to understand why this is wrong. Differentiating the common sense from the abstract sense used in epistemology and theory of perception, a subjective property can only exist in relation to a subject and *only* in relation to a subject. There is no such thing as making intersubjective because perceptual content is not shared among people (no one has the power to enter into the mind of the person and to perceive what his phenomenal consciousness presents). Intersubjective properties are not phenomenologically qualitative. And, moreover, we do not talk much in terms of intersubjective properties but in terms of practical properties and intersubjective knowledge. It is quite illogical to think that subjective property x will become intersubjective if, and only if, all members (or most members) of the human species come to perceive such property X. This is phenomenologically false not only because of the impossibility of sharing phenomena of the inner (absurd) sense, but also because it is already a truism that most subjective properties are universal among humans (since we share the same cognitive-perceptive architecture). It's not the case. Speaking of subjective properties in the sense that it is used in the theory of perception and epistemology, no subjective property can become objective or intersubjective. Indeed, what common sense calls "subjective" is in fact the opposite of "completely divorced from purely personal conceptions and tied to some putatively scientific parameter of adequacy" ... But opinions are, by nature, intersubjective because they can be shared. Opinion is nothing more than a proposition whose truth-value is not strictly determined by the speaker (for lack of evidence with some minimum rigor, for example). Therefore, value is not a mere opinion about a certain good.