Suggest you research more on what is brute facts and their relation to the degree of veracity for facts.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Jul 24, 2020 9:00 am The distinction between so-called brute and constitutional facts is spurious. Since, as you monotonously and needlessly drone (because I agree) - all factual assertions - like all linguistic expressions - are 'conditioned' - dependent on their context - there can be no such thing as a brute or unconditioned fact - true factual assertion. In other words, your own argument here demolishes Searle's claim.
Brutes facts whilst not constitutional are relative and conditioned upon specific Framework and System of Knowledge.
E.g. The TOE is a brute fact which is conditioned upon the Scientific[ Physics] Framework of System of knowledge and obviously cannot be brute fact within Promises, Beauty, Legal, and the likes.
I have already given you the justification above.To repeat and focus: in what way is 'X is Miss Universe 2019' an aesthetic assertion? What aesthetic claim does it make? Try really, really, really hard to think about and answer that question. Please.
You need to counter why my justification is not valid.
As I had stated, whatever the fact, it is conditioned upon the criteria established by the Miss World Organization where the judges would have been given certain guidelines to judge to eliminate personal bias_ness.
According to evolutionary psychology, human are programmed to what is 'beautiful' and what is not beautiful.Or try this example.
1 Factual assertion: that terd came out of something's bottom.
2 Coprophiliac aesthetic assertion: that terd is beautiful.
Do you see the functional difference between those two assertions?
Read this; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_aesthetics
If anyone were to interpret what is naturally evil as good, that would be opened to a question of perversion which need to be checked by a psychiatrist.Evolutionary aesthetics refers to evolutionary psychology theories in which the basic aesthetic preferences of Homo sapiens are argued to have evolved in order to enhance survival and reproductive success.[1]
Based on this theory, things like color preference, preferred mate body ratios, shapes, emotional ties with objects, and many other aspects of the aesthetic experience can be explained with reference to human evolution.
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