Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Jul 24, 2020 7:02 am
Is 'the Miss Universe contest began in 1926' an aesthetic fact? Does it make an aesthetic claim? Does it say anything about the nature of beauty?
There is no such thing as absolute beauty nor is there anything that is absolutely absolute, not even with any kind of facts.
The common saying is 'beauty is in the eye of the beholder,'
but beauty [and anything of aesthetic] can nevertheless be objectified when
qualified within conditions.
Point is 'whatever the conditional fact' it must always carry with it its qualifications and conditions.
There is no fact that is can be totally unconditional, i.e. a fact-in-itself or a free-standing-fact.
I have requested you to prove to me a "fact" where it is unconditional-by-itself but you have not and you will not be able to do so no matter how hard you try.
As such, that "X is Miss Universe Year YYYY" is an aesthetic claim and is a fact, but must carry with it its specific qualification and conditions.
Is 'moral attitudes towards slavery have changed over the centuries' a moral assertion of any kind? Does it say slavery is morally right or wrong?
The attitudes towards slavery by slave owners and non-slave may have changed, but the resistance to being a slave by slaves have not changed until it is so evident at present.
It is a generic principle of human nature, no human would voluntary to be owned and has his freedom restrained.
This is so evident from the most basic animals to human beings that no living entities would volunteer to be restrained.
I have claimed this principle is testable, i.e. asking every 'normal' human on Earth.
You need to recognise what constitutes a specifically aesthetic assertion - one that says something about something's beauty or ugliness - or a moral assertion - one that says something is morally right or wrong. Have a think about it.
I have repeated many times, wonder why you cannot get it.
A statement that state something is morally right or wrong that is qualified/conditioned upon a Moral Framework and System is a moral fact, not a brute fact but a constitutional fact.
Somehow your mind is stuck with one term 'fact' 'fact' 'fact' fact, ..... but unable to put the term 'fact' into its respective perspective, i.e. brute or constitutional, qualified to its respective FSK, etc. I believe there is something wrong with your cognitive abilities.
Have a think about what your mind is doing to you?
Are you familiar with the 500 pound gorilla selective attention test where the person is unable to see the gorilla right in front on him.
see this;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJG698U2Mvo
Imagine you are asked to watch a short video (above) in which six people-three in white shirts and three in black shirts-pass basketballs around. While you watch, you must keep a silent count of the number of passes made by the people in white shirts. At some point, a gorilla strolls into the middle of the action, faces the camera and thumps its chest, and then leaves, spending nine seconds on screen. Would you see the gorilla?
Almost everyone has the intuition that the answer is "yes, of course I would." How could something so obvious go completely unnoticed? But when we did this experiment at Harvard University several years ago, we found that half of the people who watched the video and counted the passes missed the gorilla. It was as though the gorilla was invisible.
This experiment reveals two things: that we are missing a lot of what goes on around us, and that we have no idea that we are missing so much. To our surprise, it has become one of the best-known experiments in psychology. It is described in most introductory textbooks and is featured in more than a dozen science museums.
It has been used by everyone from preachers and teachers to corporate trainers and terrorist hunters, not to mention characters on the TV show C.S.I., to help explain what we see and what we don't see. And it got us thinking that many other intuitive beliefs that we have about our own minds might be just as wrong. We wrote The Invisible Gorilla to explore the limits of human intuition and what they mean for ourselves and our world. We hope you read it, and if you do, we would love to hear what you think.
http://www.theinvisiblegorilla.com/gori ... iment.html