Veritas Aequitas wrote:
The statement "That's a lovely sunrise" made by an individual is not a fact but merely a personal opinion.
It can only be a fact when her statement is verified and justified empirically and philosophically within a credible FSK.
A credible FSK entails a community.
'That's a colourful sunrise' may also be a personal, and even eccentric, aesthetic ,
or scientific opinion.
"That's a stormy sunrise" may be a scientific opinion, aesthetic opinion,or a moral opinion according to the context.
All statements require a community in order to exist at all. And all statements pertain to some FSK or FSB however unreasoned or superstitious the knowledge or the belief.
So-called moral statements or aesthetic statements are so-called when they seem from the context to be relatively more about subjective feelings; and so-called scientific statements are so-called when they seem from the context to be relatively more about what is currently or locally taken to be objective knowledge.
It's a social but not an absolute fact that some eccentric statements are deluded.
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Peter Holmes wrote in the first post
1 The assertion people eat animals and their products is a fact – a true factual assertion. But the vegan assertion eating animals and their products is wrong expresses a moral judgement, not a fact. The two assertions have completely different functions.
"Is a fact" and "is wrong" pertain to the opinion of the speaker and usually to the speaker's social milieu, not to the opinion of some absolute authority.
The other clauses in the sentences mean nothing without their social contexts and are accompanied by an obvious social situation that makes the intention of the speaker specific to the social situation. For instance "eating animals and their products is wrong " could be said by a chef who is famous for inventing vegetarian flavouring. Again , " people eat animals and their products " is not true . That some or most people eat animals and their products probably are true statistics but are not evidence for the hygiene of eating the flesh of animals.