You're just fleshing out your view more, though. You're not supporting it. There's a difference.Hobbes' Choice wrote:We interpret things outside out mind, true. They are constructs; a negotiation between the mental and what you can infer is outside your mind. This is the essence of the subject/object dichotomy. For objective statements to be made it always requires comparison and reference to other's view points.
Until your construct is compared with members of your language community you have no objectivity.
If I were to similarly flesh out my view in contradistinction, I'd say:
"We don't 'interpret' things outside of our minds, we can observe them, but personally and instrumentally. We of course have conceptual constructs about things, but objective things are not identical to our concepts of them. It's important not to conflate the two. The subject/object distinction is simply a distinction of phenomena that occur in brains when they're in mental states and phenomena that occur outside of brains in mental states. There are no objective statements in the sense of objectivity being a property of the statement (noting that meanings are necessary for something to be a statement), but statements can be about objective things. Objectivity has absolutely nothing to do with agreeing with other people."
So that's just the same issues from my viewpoint. What I had inquired about, however, was a support for your viewpoint being right and mine being wrong.