That is not the question.Terrapin Station wrote:You'd have to try to explain why "Objectivity is not obvious" is meaningful but "Objectivity is obvious" is not. (Although I doubt we'd agree on philosophy of meaning, so that will probably just turn into a mess, but you can try to explain it and maybe we can avoid a philosophy of meaning discussion.)Hobbes' Choice wrote:It is not even wrong.
You are not saying anything at all.
You are saying objectivity is obvious
That part I don't agree with.that which is obvious is objective.And I don't know why that would seem to be the case to you--that it seems like I'm doing some sort of word replacement. You said, "Objectivity is not obvious." I disagreed and said, "Objectivity is obvious." So the question is then how we figure out who is right.But you are not saying why you are replacing the word objective when you mean obvious.
The things you observe are not objective, because without the reflexion in what is subjective; objectivity means nothing.
When you see a tree there is nothing here about the object/subject dichotomy. It's just a tree.
That you see a slightly different tree to me is a negotiation about our subjective experience and the commonalities and that is objective. This is not the complete tree, not the thing in itself. But nothing more that what we can agree is in fact before us.
`That's why I said you are not even wrong.