Dubious wrote:Nice to know that mediocrities at best are no better - at least not yet - than Mozart, Milton and Michelangelo.
It's not objectively true that no one is better than anyone else, just like it isn't objectively true that some people are better than other people. The objective realm is a category error for such things.
It wouldn’t be Constitutional in a democratic society to suppose there are actually superior individuals.
There aren't
actually superior individuals because such assessments have nothing to do with mind-independent facts. They have to do with what people value.
What you describe as subjective, usually an individual response to the immediate present,
It's an individual response to the past, too.
future generations will decide upon much more objectively as filtered through time.
No, they won't. People can't assess or value anything
objectively. Again, that's a category error. They assess/value things subjectively. That a bunch of people agree with each other doesn't make anything objective. "Objective" doesn't refer to "agreement," and to say that people are correct because they agree is to forward an argumentum ad populum.
That's only one function of the historical process where relatively few personalities manage to percolate through. Whatever your 'subjective' feelings, mine, or anyone elses become thoroughly insignificant in that respect.
What you're talking about IS subjective feelings.