Are all opinions potentially objectively right or wrong?

 
More Than Mortal
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
If you express an opinion, you're essentially expressing a proposition. So long as the language used is utterly water-tight, then it seems any proposition can be empirically quantifiable.

For instance, let's take the most subjective instance I can think of: "I think chocolate cake is best", where best = providing the most pleasurable stimulus. Immediately you can set up a neurocognitive experiment to determine if chocolate cake is indeed best for the individual in question. It's unlikely that the person in question is wrong about the cake that provides them with the most pleasure, but certainly not impossible.

Indeed, it's entirely possible that you could perform a global population-wide experiment to determine which kind of cake is objectively the "best" on net.


 
TB
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#13
No. Literally anything can be subjective.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
No. Literally anything can be subjective.
Not really.

If you think physics is subjective then you don't understand physics.


 
TB
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#13
No. Literally anything can be subjective.
Not really.

If you think physics is subjective then you don't understand physics.
Something something [stuff I don't understand] stuff and more stuff [possibly something that makes sense]

Nah but seriously there is stuff that is objective in the universe but I disagree that everything can be boiled down to being objective.


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My stupidity is self evident.
No. Literally anything can be subjective.
Not really.

If you think physics is subjective then you don't understand physics.
Either that or you're a filthy, rotten, good for nothing Feyerabend-ite.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
but I disagree that everything can be boiled down to being objective.
Why? I don't see how you can disagree, except by disagreeing with the opinion that all opinions express a proposition. Which itself is a proposition, which seems fairly air-tight.

1. An opinion is a subjective claim about a certain phenomenon.
2. A proposition is claim which is truth-apt, and thus relates to some objective feature of reality.
3. Opinions arise from objective phenomena.
4. Opinions relate to objective phenomena.
C. Opinions are propositions which are empirically quantifiable.


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emigrate or degenerate. the choice is yours
Mostly objective.

It's objectively wrong to think stabbing you in the face is morally right.


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My stupidity is self evident.
but I disagree that everything can be boiled down to being objective.
Why? I don't see how you can disagree, except by disagreeing with the opinion that all opinions express a proposition. Which itself is a proposition, which seems fairly air-tight.

1. An opinion is a subjective claim about a certain phenomenon.
2. A proposition is claim which is truth-apt, and thus relates to some objective feature of reality.
3. Opinions arise from objective phenomena.
4. Opinions relate to objective phenomena.
C. Opinions are propositions which are empirically quantifiable.


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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
does it matter
Well, yeah.

Even priorities come into question then; if you value one thing over another, then it's entirely possible that certain moral and epistemological presuppositions would demand that you change your priorities.


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I feel like this is an elaborate "the cake is a lie" troll, but I'll bite. You're talking about subjective facts, right?

Well sure. It really winds me up when people think objective = mind independent.

The only facts to be gleaned from your cake example are that 1) the subject truly believes chocolate cake is best for them (subjective fact); and 2) either they are right or there are other foods they hadn't considered or haven't tried that they'd enjoy more, as could be discovered via brain scan (objective fact).

Neither is more factual than the other, despite one being subjective and the other objective.

Now if you wanted to conduct a global cake survey to find the objectively best cake, you'd need to give people samples of every flavor of cake ever made before polling. The verdict would also depend on whether you are taking a hedonistic utilitarian or a negative utilitarian approach, and whether pleasure and pain can be measured against each other on a linear scale (which I don't think they can be). With these in mind, the objectively best cake may not be the cake that the most liked, but the one that is the least disliked.
Last Edit: July 07, 2015, 10:59:30 PM by Pendulate


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Opinions are facts because there is only one kind of possible proof, and that is first-person evidence. If I say "I think peanut butter is better than caramel", the only evidence available to support or deny the claim is my own proposition.


 
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Opinions are facts because there is only one kind of possible proof, and that is first-person evidence. If I say "I think peanut butter is better than caramel", the only evidence available to support or deny the claim is my own proposition.
this is something we got into when i was arguing with tblocks

of course, "i think" statements are obviously always facts--it's a fact that you think something

however, whether or not peanut butter is empirically "better" than caramel by an objective standard of taste, however, is where the subjective part comes in--and i think that's what meta's asking

can peanut butter be objectively proven to be tastier than caramel (or vice-versa)?
Last Edit: July 08, 2015, 12:30:20 AM by Verbatim


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can peanut butter be objectively proven to be tastier than caramel (or vice-versa)?
If by objective you mean able to be measured, then maybe

Both peanut butter and caramel can be measured on how many people like/dislike them, it would then be a case of calculating which is the more productive. But that's assuming there's a metric for doing that, which I doubt.

If by objective you mean universal, then no.


 
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Much of this comes down to conditioning. If I could contrive a scenario, perhaps the reason one might prefer peanut butter to caramel is because they joked on a piece of caramel as an infant, and that psychological experience caused you to think less of caramel in the future (subconsciously).

Obviously, not all of these conditionings will be so drastic or cartoonish or overt like that. But my basic point is, none of us are born with these proclivities--that would be the basic argument I'm making. Maybe it's simply as subtle as, you had two or three more pieces of some peanut butter treat as a kid than you've had of caramel, and as a result, you prefer peanut butter. Maybe you associate peanut butter with pleasant times you've had as a kid, or with another person. All of it matters. You aren't born a "peanut butter lover".

The same could be said of anything, really. If you like a certain kind of video game, you were most certainly conditioned to like it. Maybe someone who doesn't like violent video games only dislikes them because they associate any type of violence with negativity--perhaps because they had a bad accident as a child that involved pain or blood or something. I don't know.

I'm just not really willing to believe that some people like things for no discernible reason. We might not be able to provide the answers for why we like everything we like, but I don't think that's incredibly important. As for the objectivity of these opinions, I can't really say there's anything objective about it.

However, you CAN be conditioned in bad ways. For example, maybe the reason someone is a scat fetishist is because they were dropped on their head thirty times as a kid. That would be negative conditioning, and that would probably represent a bad reason to like something, and, consequently, a "bad" or "wrong" opinion.

For a less extreme example, take video games. Maybe the reason someone likes beat-em-up games is because they were bullied as a kid, and these kinds of games allow them to virtually "get back" at the bully. The conditioning that led this person to like this type of game is a negative experience, or a negative conditioning. While innocuous, it could also be argued that his reason for liking the game is wrong (if you believe that "revenge" is generally a bad thing, which I do).

i hope what i'm trying to say is at all clear


 
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Both peanut butter and caramel can be measured on how many people like/dislike them, it would then be a case of calculating which is the more productive. But that's assuming there's a metric for doing that, which I doubt.

If by objective you mean universal, then no.
Yes, universal. I don't really care how many people like it over the other--that doesn't really say anything, except "these people so happened to be conditioned in such a way that they'd like peanut butter over caramel, or vice versa"

It would be useless junk data, considering the near-infinite number of scenarios that would result in someone having a preference for peanut butter over caramel.
Last Edit: July 08, 2015, 12:46:04 AM by Verbatim


 
TB
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#13
Much of this comes down to conditioning. If I could contrive a scenario, perhaps the reason one might prefer peanut butter to caramel is because they joked on a piece of caramel as an infant, and that psychological experience caused you to think less of caramel in the future (subconsciously).

Obviously, not all of these conditionings will be so drastic or cartoonish or overt like that. But my basic point is, none of us are born with these proclivities--that would be the basic argument I'm making. Maybe it's simply as subtle as, you had two or three more pieces of some peanut butter treat as a kid than you've had of caramel, and as a result, you prefer peanut butter. Maybe you associate peanut butter with pleasant times you've had as a kid, or with another person. All of it matters. You aren't born a "peanut butter lover".

The same could be said of anything, really. If you like a certain kind of video game, you were most certainly conditioned to like it. Maybe someone who doesn't like violent video games only dislikes them because they associate any type of violence with negativity--perhaps because they had a bad accident as a child that involved pain or blood or something. I don't know.

I'm just not really willing to believe that some people like things for no discernible reason. We might not be able to provide the answers for why we like everything we like, but I don't think that's incredibly important. As for the objectivity of these opinions, I can't really say there's anything objective about it.

However, you CAN be conditioned in bad ways. For example, maybe the reason someone is a scat fetishist is because they were dropped on their head thirty times as a kid. That would be negative conditioning, and that would probably represent a bad reason to like something, and, consequently, a "bad" or "wrong" opinion.

For a less extreme example, take video games. Maybe the reason someone likes beat-em-up games is because they were bullied as a kid, and these kinds of games allow them to virtually "get back" at the bully. The conditioning that led this person to like this type of game is a negative experience, or a negative conditioning. While innocuous, it could also be argued that his reason for liking the game is wrong (if you believe that "revenge" is generally a bad thing, which I do).

i hope what i'm trying to say is at all clear
Ay I gave you practice!


 
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For a less extreme example, take video games. Maybe the reason someone likes beat-em-up games is because they were bullied as a kid, and these kinds of games allow them to virtually "get back" at the bully. The conditioning that led this person to like this type of game is a negative experience, or a negative conditioning. While innocuous, it could also be argued that his reason for liking the game is wrong (if you believe that "revenge" is generally a bad thing, which I do).

i hope what i'm trying to say is at all clear
and of course, by saying this, i think i have to note that just because your opinion may be "wrong", in the sense that the conditioning that led you to have such an opinion is bad/negative/wrong, doesn't mean that you're still not entitled to it--it's not that you're no longer allowed to enjoy what you enjoy, but i'm just saying

if the reason you like (or dislike) something is only because you had a messed up childhood, that's kind of unfortunate
and i pity you
Last Edit: July 08, 2015, 12:53:01 AM by Verbatim


 
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Indeed, it's entirely possible that you could perform a global population-wide experiment to determine which kind of cake is objectively the "best" on net.
not really though

i don't need to tell you that "more people think x" =/= "x is the best way to think"

if anything, it would just show that, statistically, the average person would be most likely to enjoy x type of cake
some cakes would have a greater probability of being enjoyed, but nothing is absolute
Last Edit: July 08, 2015, 01:06:34 AM by Verbatim


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Indeed, it's entirely possible that you could perform a global population-wide experiment to determine which kind of cake is objectively the "best" on net.
not really though

i don't need to tell you that "more people think x" =/= "x is the best way to think"

if anything, it would just show that, statistically, the average person is more likely to enjoy chocolate cake than not
(or vice versa)
I don't think he means 'best' in a prescriptive sense, in that we ought to enjoy chocolate cake the most. Just that, like you said, we're more likely to enjoy it.

more people enjoy x = x is your best bet if you want to enjoy yourself


 
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hmm

fair enough, if that's his argument


 
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fuck you
Opinions are facts.

imo YOU SUCK


 
 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Indeed, it's entirely possible that you could perform a global population-wide experiment to determine which kind of cake is objectively the "best" on net.
not really though

i don't need to tell you that "more people think x" =/= "x is the best way to think"

if anything, it would just show that, statistically, the average person would be most likely to enjoy x type of cake
some cakes would have a greater probability of being enjoyed, but nothing is absolute
I was talking descriptively, not prescriptively. Like, I don't think it's possible to tell what cake people should enjoy.


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Blurring the line between opinionated statements like "chocolate cake is best" and tangible propositions such as such as "chocolate cake, for the most part, suits the purpose of providing more pleasure for most people better" removes the significance of the word opinion.

Goalpost moving at best.
Last Edit: July 08, 2015, 09:25:28 AM by eggsalad


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Blurring the line between opinionated statements like "chocolate cake is best" and tangible propositions such as such as "chocolate cake, for the most part, suits the purpose of providing more pleasure for most people better" removes the significance of the word opinion.
At that point, you have to question the significance of opinions in the first place.

But the point I'm making is that there is no fundamental, epistemological difference between an opinion and a truth-apt proposition.


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Blurring the line between opinionated statements like "chocolate cake is best" and tangible propositions such as such as "chocolate cake, for the most part, suits the purpose of providing more pleasure for most people better" removes the significance of the word opinion.
At that point, you have to question the significance of opinions in the first place.

But the point I'm making is that there is no fundamental, epistemological difference between an opinion and a truth-apt proposition.
"Chocolate cake is best" is an opinion because it makes no attempt at establishing the context of what "best" means and thus can be answered truthfully by different viewers of the question because they hold differing values. When it is established that the goal of cake is to be tasty to humans, something can actually be determined.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
"Chocolate cake is best" is an opinion because it makes no attempt at establishing the context of what "best" means and thus can be answered truthfully by different viewers of the question because they hold differing values.

Well, no.

If you haven't established the definitions of the words in your claim, it can't be answered properly at all.


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"Chocolate cake is best" is an opinion because it makes no attempt at establishing the context of what "best" means and thus can be answered truthfully by different viewers of the question because they hold differing values.

Well, no.

If you haven't established the definitions of the words in your claim, it can't be answered properly at all.
I guess I thought that's what distinguished opinions from actual proposals.


 
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"Chocolate cake is best" is an opinion because it makes no attempt at establishing the context of what "best" means and thus can be answered truthfully by different viewers of the question because they hold differing values.
Well, no.

If you haven't established the definitions of the words in your claim, it can't be answered properly at all.
exactly

which is why, from a philosophical standpoint, subjective tastes are vastly insignificant, because there's so many variables, and they only serve to tease and appease our highly capricious brains

as for whether there's any difference between an opinion and a truth-rich proposition, if we took a neurological poll to see how many people in the world enjoy biscuits, we might find that 83.45% of all people in the world enjoy biscuits, so "83.45% of human beings on Planet Earth enjoy biscuits" would be your truth-rich proposition.

But like eggsalad said, that does tend to undermine the very definition of "opinion"--opinions are incompatible with any empirical data, because in order to calculate whether x is "better" in some way than y, you'd have to account for all possible types of social, environmental, genetic, etc. conditioning that would lead one to prefer one over the other.

Which is not only comically impossible (the sort of impossibility that makes me reel back and chuckle at the very thought of it), it's nonsensical. Could we do it if we sat down and tried?... No, I really don't think so. It would be a waste of time, of course.

What we can attempt to do is peer at individual cases, though. If we had video recording of two people's entire lives, including their inner thoughts, feelings, opinions, emotions, and all other brain function, we might be able to calculate precisely why they have each and every one of their preferences to a tee, and compare them.

The tricky part comes in when attempting to evaluate the conditionings. Linda may prefer chocolate over vanilla because she had more chocolate as a child than vanilla, and she associates chocolate more with goodness and happiness. Derrick may prefer vanilla over chocolate for similar reasons--he had more vanilla than chocolate as a kid, and it reminds him of his childhood, when he used to have it with his friends at school.

How can one judge which is the "better" one of these two extremely mundane types of social conditioning?