Belindi wrote: ↑March 8th, 2020, 6:35 am
If the social context is such that the speaker want to locate Paris in relation to other places on a map then it's a measurement according to 'measurement' meaning how something relates in time and space to somethings else.
Well, the proposition in question --- "Paris is the capital of France" --- says nothing about Paris's location, or anything about how it relates in time and space to anything else. Those questions have no bearing on whether that proposition is true and objective.
??? "It is likely to rain tomorrow" is an inductive proposition. What goal or criteria do you read in it? Some examples would be helpful, Belindi.
The social usefulness of predicting weather is peculiarly well known in the British Isles. The criteria for saying it vary according to the elided intention of the speaker.E.g. "It is likely to rain tomorrow "(so we'd better arrange for a taxi not the pony and trap for her wedding), " "It is likely to rain tomorrow ", said Eeyore the depressive donkey", "It is likely to rain tomorrow" (and the frogs will be happy again). "It is likely to rain tomorrow"(is the sort of thing you can say to a friendly stranger).
The question (I thought) was whether "It is likely to rain tomorrow" implies some goal. That people who hear that statement may have various goals is not the same thing. "Ought" and "should" statements imply a
specific goal. The above statement does not.
Well, I agree those propositions are objective, but they're not the only ones. Unless your definition of "objective" differs from the one I mentioned earlier.
Two thought frames.
1. objective: deductive: analytic: logical- mathematical.
2. subjective: inductive: synthetic: empirical.
Ah, so you are using a different definition of "objective" and "subjective" than the ones I gave. Limiting "objective" to analytic propositions is wildly at odds with the common usages of that term; most of the claims acknowledged as "objective" are synthetic (such as, "Paris is the capital of France"). Here is that dictionary definition again:
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Definition of objective (Entry 1 of 2)
1a: expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations
objective art
2a: of, relating to, or being an object, phenomenon, or condition in the realm of sensible experience independent of individual thought and perceptible by all observers : having reality independent of the mind
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https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/objective
Kuhn demonstrated how a prevailing paradigm is social, despite the best efforts of scientists to overcome their subjectiveness.
You seem to be equating "subjectiveness" with "social." Scientific paradigms are indeed social --- all theories are social, being formulated in a public language --- but that doesn't make them "subjective." And I'd have to check, but I don't recall Kuhn saying anything like "scientists must overcome their subjectiveness." They are reluctant to give up accepted paradigms, not because of "subjectivity" on their part, but because those paradigms have proven explanatory power. But of course, they do give them up when a new paradigm comes along that can explain phenomena the old one cannot, yet still explains the what the old one did.
The dilemma is a) accepting existential angst or b) trying to avoid existential angst.
Yikes. I have no idea what existential angst has to do with the subject of this thread, or even whether anyone other than some characters in Camus and Sartre suffer from it.
So the authentic human being accepts their existential angst and tries to make sense of nature, and the world as an aspect of nature, as their own responsibility.
Well, I agree that making sense of the world is up to us.