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Subjectivity and objectivity (philosophy)

The distinction between subjectivity and objectivity is a basic idea of philosophy, particularly epistemology and metaphysics. It is often related to discussions of consciousness, agency, personhood, philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, reality, truth, and communication (for example in narrative communication and journalism).

  • Something is subjective if it is dependent on a mind (biases, perception, emotions, opinions, imagination, or conscious experience).[1] If a claim is true exclusively when considering the claim from the viewpoint of a sentient being, it is subjectively true. For example, one person may consider the weather to be pleasantly warm, and another person may consider the same weather to be too hot; both views are subjective. The word subjectivity comes from subject in a philosophical sense, meaning an individual who possesses unique conscious experiences, such as perspectives, feelings, beliefs, and desires,[1][2] or who (consciously) acts upon or wields power over some other entity (an object).[3]
  • Something is objective if it can be confirmed independent of a mind. If a claim is true even when considering it outside the viewpoint of a sentient being (how ?), then it is labelled objectively true. Scientific objectivity is practicing science while intentionally reducing partiality, biases, or external influences. Moral objectivity is the concept of moral or ethical codes being compared to one another through a set of universal facts or a universal perspective and not through differing conflicting perspectives.[4] Journalistic objectivity is the reporting of facts and news with minimal personal bias or in an impartial or politically neutral manner.

Both ideas have been given various and ambiguous definitions by differing sources as the distinction is often a given but not the specific focal point of philosophical discourse.[5] The two words are usually regarded as opposites, though complications regarding the two have been explored in philosophy: for example, the view of particular thinkers that objectivity is an illusion and does not exist at all, or that a spectrum joins subjectivity and objectivity with a gray area in-between, or that the problem of other minds is best viewed through the concept of intersubjectivity, developing since the 20th century. The root of the words subjectivity and objectivity are subject and object, philosophical terms that mean, respectively, an observer and a thing being observed.

History in Western philosophy edit

In Western philosophy, the idea of subjectivity is thought to have its roots in the works of the European Enlightenment thinkers Descartes and Kant though it could also stem as far back as the Ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle's work relating to the soul.[6][5] The idea of subjectivity is often seen as a peripheral to other philosophical concepts, namely skepticism, individuals and individuality, and existentialism.[5][6] The questions surrounding subjectivity have to do with whether or not people can escape the subjectivity of their own human existence and whether or not there is an obligation to try to do so.[1] Important thinkers who focused on this area of study include Descartes, Locke, Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Husserl, Foucault, Derrida, Nagel, and Sartre.[1]

Subjectivity was rejected by Foucault and Derrida in favor of constructionism,[1] but Sartre embraced and continued Descartes' work in the subject by emphasizing subjectivity in phenomenology.[1][7] Sartre believed that, even within the material force of human society, the ego was an essentially transcendent being—posited, for instance, in his opus Being and Nothingness through his arguments about the 'being-for-others' and the 'for-itself' (i.e., an objective and subjective human being).[7]

The innermost core of subjectivity resides in a unique act of what Fichte called "self-positing", where each subject is a point of absolute autonomy, which means that it cannot be reduced to a moment in the network of causes and effects.[8]

Subjectivity applied edit

One way that subjectivity has been conceptualized by philosophers such as Kierkegaard is in the context of religion.[1] Religious beliefs can vary quite extremely from person to person, but people often think that whatever they believe is the truth. Subjectivity as seen by Descartes and Sartre was a matter of what was dependent on consciousness, so, because religious beliefs require the presence of a consciousness that can believe, they must be subjective.[1] This is in contrast to what has been proven by pure logic or hard sciences, which does not depend on the perception of people, and is therefore considered objective.[1] Subjectivity is what relies on personal perception regardless of what is proven or objective.[1]

Many philosophical arguments within this area of study have to do with moving from subjective thoughts to objective thoughts with many different methods employed to get from one to the other along with a variety of conclusions reached.[1] This is exemplified by Descartes deductions that move from reliance on subjectivity to somewhat of a reliance on God for objectivity.[1][9] Foucault and Derrida denied the idea of subjectivity in favor of their ideas of constructs in order to account for differences in human thought.[1] Instead of focusing on the idea of consciousness and self-consciousness shaping the way humans perceive the world, these thinkers would argue that it is instead the world that shapes humans, so they would see religion less as a belief and more as a cultural construction.[1]

Others like Husserl and Sartre followed the phenomenological approach.[1] This approach focused on the distinct separation of the human mind and the physical world, where the mind is subjective because it can take liberties like imagination and self-awareness where religion might be examined regardless of any kind of subjectivity.[7] The philosophical conversation around subjectivity remains one that struggles with the epistemological question of what is real, what is made up, and what it would mean to be separated completely from subjectivity.[1]

In epistemology and theory of knowledge edit

Aristotle's teacher Plato considered geometry to be a condition of his idealist philosophy concerned with universal truth.[clarification needed] In Plato's Republic, Socrates opposes the sophist Thrasymachus's relativistic account of justice, and argues that justice is mathematical in its conceptual structure, and that ethics was therefore a precise and objective enterprise with impartial standards for truth and correctness, like geometry.[10] The rigorous mathematical treatment Plato gave to moral concepts set the tone for the western tradition of moral objectivism that came after him.[citation needed] His contrasting between objectivity and opinion became the basis for philosophies intent on resolving the questions of reality, truth, and existence. He saw opinions as belonging to the shifting sphere of sensibilities, as opposed to a fixed, eternal and knowable incorporeality. Where Plato distinguished between how we know things and their ontological status, subjectivism such as George Berkeley's depends on perception.[11] In Platonic terms, a criticism of subjectivism is that it is difficult to distinguish between knowledge, opinions, and subjective knowledge.[12]

Platonic idealism is a form of metaphysical objectivism, holding that the ideas exist independently from the individual. Berkeley's empirical idealism, on the other hand, holds that things only exist as they are perceived. Both approaches boast an attempt at objectivity. Plato's definition of objectivity can be found in his epistemology, which is based on mathematics, and his metaphysics, where knowledge of the ontological status of objects and ideas is resistant to change.[11]

In opposition to philosopher René Descartes' method of personal deduction[clarification needed], natural philosopher Isaac Newton applied the relatively objective scientific method to look for evidence before forming a hypothesis.[13] Partially in response to Kant's rationalism, logician Gottlob Frege applied objectivity to his epistemological and metaphysical philosophies. If reality exists independently of consciousness, then it would logically include a plurality of indescribable forms. Objectivity requires a definition of truth formed by propositions with truth value. An attempt of forming an objective construct incorporates ontological commitments to the reality of objects.[14]

The importance of perception in evaluating and understanding objective reality is debated in the observer effect of quantum mechanics. Direct or naïve realists rely on perception as key in observing objective reality, while instrumentalists hold that observations are useful in predicting objective reality. The concepts that encompass these ideas are important in the philosophy of science. Philosophies of mind explore whether objectivity relies on perceptual constancy.[15]

In ethics edit

Moral objectivism and relativism edit

Moral objectivism is the view that what is right or wrong does not depend on what anyone thinks is right or wrong.[4] Moral objectivism depends on how the moral code affects the well-being of the people of the society. Moral objectivism allows for moral codes to be compared to each other through a set of universal facts than mores of a society. Nicholas Reschar defines mores as customs within every society (e.g., what women can wear) and states that moral codes cannot be compared to one's personal moral compass.[4] An example is the categorical imperative of Immanuel Kant which says: "Act only according to that maxim [i.e., rule] whereby you can at the same time will that it become a universal law." John Stuart Mill was a consequential thinker and therefore proposed utilitarianism which asserts that in any situation, the right thing to do is whatever is likely to produce the most happiness overall. Moral relativism is the view where an actor's moral codes are locally derived from their culture.[16] The rules within moral codes are equal to each other and are only deemed "right" or "wrong" within their specific moral codes.[16] Relativism is opposite to Universalism because there is not a single moral code for every agent to follow.[16] Relativism differs from Nihilism because it validates every moral code that exists whereas nihilism does not.[16] When it comes to relativism, Russian philosopher and writer, Fyodor Dostoevsky, coined the phrase "If God doesn't exist, everything is permissible". That phrase was his view of the consequences for rejecting theism as a basis of ethics. American anthropologist Ruth Benedict argued that there is no single objective morality and that moral codes necessarily vary by culture.[17]

Ethical subjectivism edit

The term "ethical subjectivism" covers two distinct theories in ethics. According to cognitive versions of ethical subjectivism, the truth of moral statements depends upon people's values, attitudes, feelings, or beliefs. Some forms of cognitivist ethical subjectivism can be counted as forms of realism, others are forms of anti-realism.[18] David Hume is a foundational figure for cognitive ethical subjectivism. On a standard interpretation of his theory, a trait of character counts as a moral virtue when it evokes a sentiment of approbation in a sympathetic, informed, and rational human observer.[19] Similarly, Roderick Firth's ideal observer theory held that right acts are those that an impartial, rational observer would approve of.[20] William James, another ethical subjectivist, held that an end is good (to or for a person) just in the case it is desired by that person (see also ethical egoism). According to non-cognitive versions of ethical subjectivism, such as emotivism, prescriptivism, and expressivism, ethical statements cannot be true or false, at all: rather, they are expressions of personal feelings or commands.[21] For example, on A. J. Ayer's emotivism, the statement, "Murder is wrong" is equivalent in meaning to the emotive, "Murder, Boo!"[22]

Ethical objectivism edit

According to the ethical objectivist, the truth or falsehood of typical moral judgments does not depend upon the beliefs or feelings of any person or group of persons. This view holds that moral propositions are analogous to propositions about chemistry, biology, or history, in so much as they are true despite what anyone believes, hopes, wishes, or feels. When they fail to describe this mind-independent moral reality, they are false—no matter what anyone believes, hopes, wishes, or feels.

There are many versions of ethical objectivism, including various religious views of morality, Platonistic intuitionism, Kantianism, utilitarianism, and certain forms of ethical egoism and contractualism. Note that Platonists define ethical objectivism in an even more narrow way, so that it requires the existence of intrinsic value. Consequently, they reject the idea that contractualists or egoists could be ethical objectivists. Objectivism, in turn, places primacy on the origin of the frame of reference—and, as such, considers any arbitrary frame of reference ultimately a form of ethical subjectivism by a transitive property, even when the frame incidentally coincides with reality and can be used for measurements.

In history and historiography edit

History as a discipline has wrestled with notions of objectivity from its very beginning. While its object of study is commonly thought to be the past, the only thing historians have to work with are different versions of stories based on individual perceptions of reality and memory.

Several history streams developed to devise ways to solve this dilemma: Historians like Leopold von Ranke (19th century) have advocated for the use of extensive evidence –especially archived physical paper documents– to recover the bygone past, claiming that, as opposed to people's memories, objects remain stable in what they say about the era they witnessed, and therefore represent a better insight into objective reality.[23] In the 20th century, the Annales School emphasized the importance of shifting focus away from the perspectives of influential men –usually politicians around whose actions narratives of the past were shaped–, and putting it on the voices of ordinary people.[24] Postcolonial streams of history challenge the colonial-postcolonial dichotomy and critique Eurocentric academia practices, such as the demand for historians from colonized regions to anchor their local narratives to events happening in the territories of their colonizers to earn credibility.[25] All the streams explained above try to uncover whose voice is more or less truth-bearing and how historians can stitch together versions of it to best explain what "actually happened."

The anthropologist Michel-Rolph Trouillot developed the concepts of historicity 1 and 2 to explain the difference between the materiality of socio-historical processes (H1) and the narratives that are told about the materiality of socio-historical processes (H2).[26] This distinction hints that H1 would be understood as the factual reality that elapses and is captured with the concept of "objective truth", and that H2 is the collection of subjectivities that humanity has stitched together to grasp the past. Debates about positivism, relativism, and postmodernism are relevant to evaluating these concepts' importance and the distinction between them.

Ethical considerations edit

In his book "Silencing the past", Trouillot wrote about the power dynamics at play in history-making, outlining four possible moments in which historical silences can be created: (1) making of sources (who gets to know how to write, or to have possessions that are later examined as historical evidence), (2) making of archives (what documents are deemed important to save and which are not, how to classify materials, and how to order them within physical or digital archives), (3) making of narratives (which accounts of history are consulted, which voices are given credibility), and (4) the making of history (the retrospective construction of what The Past is).[27]

Because history (official, public, familial, personal) informs current perceptions and how we make sense of the present, whose voice gets to be included in it –and how– has direct consequences in material socio-historical processes. Thinking of current historical narratives as impartial depictions of the totality of events unfolded in the past by labeling them as "objective" risks sealing historical understanding. Acknowledging that history is never objective and always incomplete has a meaningful opportunity to support social justice efforts. Under said notion, voices that have been silenced are placed on an equal footing to the grand and popular narratives of the world, appreciated for their unique insight of reality through their subjective lens.

In sociology edit

Subjectivity is an inherently social mode that comes about through innumerable interactions within society. As much as subjectivity is a process of individuation, it is equally a process of socialization, the individual never being isolated in a self-contained environment, but endlessly engaging in interaction with the surrounding world. Culture is a living totality of the subjectivity of any given society constantly undergoing transformation.[28] Subjectivity is both shaped by it and shapes it in turn, but also by other things like the economy, political institutions, communities, as well as the natural world.

Though the boundaries of societies and their cultures are indefinable and arbitrary, the subjectivity inherent in each one is palatable and can be recognized as distinct from others. Subjectivity is in part a particular experience or organization of reality, which includes how one views and interacts with humanity, objects, consciousness, and nature, so the difference between different cultures brings about an alternate experience of existence that forms life in a different manner. A common effect on an individual of this disjunction between subjectivities is culture shock, where the subjectivity of the other culture is considered alien and possibly incomprehensible or even hostile.

Political subjectivity is an emerging concept in social sciences and humanities.[3] Political subjectivity is a reference to the deep embeddedness of subjectivity in the socially intertwined systems of power and meaning. "Politicality", writes Sadeq Rahimi in Meaning, Madness and Political Subjectivity, "is not an added aspect of the subject, but indeed the mode of being of the subject, that is, precisely what the subject is."[29]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Solomon, Robert C. "Subjectivity", in Honderich, Ted. Oxford Companion to Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2005), p.900.
  2. ^ Gonzalez Rey, Fernando (June 2019). "Subjectivity in Debate: Some Psychology". Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour. 49: 212–234 – via EBCOhost.
  3. ^ a b Allen, Amy (2002). "Power, Subjectivity, and Agency: Between Arendt and Foucault". International Journal of Philosophical Studies. 10 (2): 131–49. doi:10.1080/09672550210121432. S2CID 144541333.
  4. ^ a b c Rescher, Nicholas (January 2008). "Moral Objectivity". Social Philosophy and Policy. 25 (1): 393–409. doi:10.1017/S0265052508080151. S2CID 233358084.
  5. ^ a b c Bykova, Marina F. (February 2018). "On the Problem of Subjectivity: Editor's Introduction". Russian Studies in Philosophy. 56: 1–5 – via EBSCOhost.
  6. ^ a b Strazzoni, Andrea (2015). "Introduction. Subjectivity and Individuality: Two Strands in Early Modern Philosophy". Societate Si Politica. 9 – via ProQuest.
  7. ^ a b c Thomas, Baldwin. "Sartre, Jean-Paul," in Honderich, Ted. Oxford Companion to Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2005). pp. 834–837
  8. ^ Žižek, Slavoj (2019-09-23). "The Fall That Makes Us Like God, Part I". The Philosophical Salon. Archived from the original on 2019-09-25. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  9. ^ Cottingham, John. "Descartes, René," in Honderich, Ted. Oxford Companion to Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 201–205.
  10. ^ Plato, "The Republic", 337B, HarperCollins Publishers, 1968
  11. ^ a b E. Douka Kabîtoglou (1991). "Shelley and Berkeley: The Platonic Connection" (PDF): 20–35. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. ^ Mary Margaret Mackenzie (1985). "Plato's moral theory". Journal of Medical Ethics. 11 (2): 88–91. doi:10.1136/jme.11.2.88. PMC 1375153. PMID 4009640.
  13. ^ Suzuki, Fumitaka (March 2012). "The Cogito Proposition of Descartes and Characteristics of His Ego Theory" (PDF). Bulletin of Aichi University of Education. 61: 73–80.
  14. ^ Clinton Tolley. "Kant on the Generality of Logic" (PDF). University of California, San Diego. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Tyler Burge, Origins of Objectivity, Oxford University Press, 2010.
  16. ^ a b c d Wreen, Michael (July 2018). "What Is Moral Relativism?". Philosophy. 93 (3): 337–354. doi:10.1017/S0031819117000614. S2CID 171526831. ProQuest 2056736032.
  17. ^ "Moral Relativism and Objectivism". University of California, Santa Cruz. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  18. ^ Thomas Pölzler (2018). "How to Measure Moral Realism". Review of Philosophy and Psychology. 9 (3): 647–670. doi:10.1007/s13164-018-0401-8. PMC 6132410. PMID 30220945.
  19. ^ Rayner, Sam (2005). "Hume's Moral Philosophy". Macalester Journal of Philosophy. 14 (1): 6–21.
  20. ^ (PDF). Stance. Ball State University. 3: 55–61. April 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2023-06-28.
  21. ^ Marchetti, Sarin (21 December 2010). "William James on Truth and Invention in Morality". European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy. II (2). doi:10.4000/ejpap.910.
  22. ^ "24.231 Ethics – Handout 3 Ayer's Emotivism" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  23. ^ Leopold von Ranke, “Author’s Preface,” in History of the Reformation in Germany, trans. Sarah Austin, vii–xi. London: George Rutledge and Sons, 1905.
  24. ^ Andrea, A. (1991). Mentalities in history. The Historian 53(3), 605–608.
  25. ^ Chakrabarty, D. (1992). Postcoloniality and the artifice of history: Who speaks for "Indian" pasts?Representations, (37), 1–26. doi:10.2307/2928652.
  26. ^ Trouillot, Michel-Rolph. (1995). Silencing the past : power and the production of history. Boston, Mass. :Beacon Press,
  27. ^ Trouillot, Michel-Rolph. (1995). Silencing the past : power and the production of history. Boston, Mass. :Beacon Press,
  28. ^ Silverman, H.J. ed., 2014. Questioning foundations: truth, subjectivity, and culture. Routledge.[page needed]
  29. ^ Rahimi, Sadeq (2015). Meaning, Madness and Political Subjectivity: A Study of Schizophrenia and Culture in Turkey. Oxford & New York: Routledge. p. 8. ISBN 978-1138840829. from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2015-03-22.

Further reading edit

  • Bachelard, Gaston. La formation de l'esprit scientifique: contribution à une psychanalyse de la connaissance. Paris: Vrin, 2004. ISBN 2-7116-1150-7.
  • Beiser, Frederick C. (2002). German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781–1801. Harvard University Press.
  • Block, Ned; Flanagan, Owen J.; & Gzeldere, Gven (Eds.) The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debates. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-52210-6
  • Bowie, Andrew (1990). Aesthetics and Subjectivity : From Kant to Nietzsche. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Castillejo, David. The Formation of Modern Objectivity. Madrid: Ediciones de Arte y Bibliofilia, 1982.
  • Dallmayr, Winfried Reinhard (1981). Twilight of Subjectivity: Contributions to a Post-Individualist Theory Politics. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press.
  • Ellis, C. & Flaherty, M. (1992). Investigating Subjectivity: Research on Lived Experience. Newbury Park, CA: Sage. ISBN 978-0-8039-4496-1
  • Farrell, Frank B. (1994). Subjectivity, Realism, and Postmodernism: The Recovery of the World in Recent Philosophy. Cambridge – New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Gaukroger, Stephen. (2012). Objectivity. Oxford University Press.
  • Johnson, Daniel (July 2003). . Quodlibet Journal. 5 (2–3). Archived from the original on 2017-06-24. Retrieved 2023-06-28.
  • Kuhn, Thomas S. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996, 3rd ed. ISBN 0-226-45808-3.
  • Lauer, Quentin (1958). The Triumph of Subjectivity: An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology. Fordham University Press.
  • Megill, Allan. Rethinking Objectivity. London: Duke UP, 1994.
  • Nagel, Ernest. The Structure of Science. New York: Brace and World, 1961.
  • Nagel, Thomas. The View from Nowhere. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1986
  • Nozick, Robert. Invariances: the structure of the objective world. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2001.
  • Popper, Karl. R. Objective Knowledge: An Evolutionary Approach. Oxford University Press, 1972. ISBN 0-19-875024-2.
  • Rescher, Nicholas. Objectivity: the obligations of impersonal reason. Notre Dame: Notre Dame Press, 1977.
  • Rorty, Richard. Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991
  • Rousset, Bernard. La théorie kantienne de l'objectivité, Paris: Vrin, 1967.
  • Scheffler, Israel. Science and Subjectivity. Hackett, 1982. Voices of Wisdom; a multicultural philosophy reader. Kessler

External links edit

subjectivity, objectivity, philosophy, distinction, between, subjectivity, objectivity, basic, idea, philosophy, particularly, epistemology, metaphysics, often, related, discussions, consciousness, agency, personhood, philosophy, mind, philosophy, language, re. The distinction between subjectivity and objectivity is a basic idea of philosophy particularly epistemology and metaphysics It is often related to discussions of consciousness agency personhood philosophy of mind philosophy of language reality truth and communication for example in narrative communication and journalism Something is subjective if it is dependent on a mind biases perception emotions opinions imagination or conscious experience 1 If a claim is true exclusively when considering the claim from the viewpoint of a sentient being it is subjectively true For example one person may consider the weather to be pleasantly warm and another person may consider the same weather to be too hot both views are subjective The word subjectivity comes from subject in a philosophical sense meaning an individual who possesses unique conscious experiences such as perspectives feelings beliefs and desires 1 2 or who consciously acts upon or wields power over some other entity an object 3 Something is objective if it can be confirmed independent of a mind If a claim is true even when considering it outside the viewpoint of a sentient being how then it is labelled objectively true Scientific objectivity is practicing science while intentionally reducing partiality biases or external influences Moral objectivity is the concept of moral or ethical codes being compared to one another through a set of universal facts or a universal perspective and not through differing conflicting perspectives 4 Journalistic objectivity is the reporting of facts and news with minimal personal bias or in an impartial or politically neutral manner Both ideas have been given various and ambiguous definitions by differing sources as the distinction is often a given but not the specific focal point of philosophical discourse 5 The two words are usually regarded as opposites though complications regarding the two have been explored in philosophy for example the view of particular thinkers that objectivity is an illusion and does not exist at all or that a spectrum joins subjectivity and objectivity with a gray area in between or that the problem of other minds is best viewed through the concept of intersubjectivity developing since the 20th century The root of the words subjectivity and objectivity are subject and object philosophical terms that mean respectively an observer and a thing being observed Contents 1 History in Western philosophy 1 1 Subjectivity applied 2 In epistemology and theory of knowledge 3 In ethics 3 1 Moral objectivism and relativism 3 2 Ethical subjectivism 3 3 Ethical objectivism 4 In history and historiography 4 1 Ethical considerations 5 In sociology 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory in Western philosophy editIn Western philosophy the idea of subjectivity is thought to have its roots in the works of the European Enlightenment thinkers Descartes and Kant though it could also stem as far back as the Ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle s work relating to the soul 6 5 The idea of subjectivity is often seen as a peripheral to other philosophical concepts namely skepticism individuals and individuality and existentialism 5 6 The questions surrounding subjectivity have to do with whether or not people can escape the subjectivity of their own human existence and whether or not there is an obligation to try to do so 1 Important thinkers who focused on this area of study include Descartes Locke Kant Hegel Kierkegaard Husserl Foucault Derrida Nagel and Sartre 1 Subjectivity was rejected by Foucault and Derrida in favor of constructionism 1 but Sartre embraced and continued Descartes work in the subject by emphasizing subjectivity in phenomenology 1 7 Sartre believed that even within the material force of human society the ego was an essentially transcendent being posited for instance in his opus Being and Nothingness through his arguments about the being for others and the for itself i e an objective and subjective human being 7 The innermost core of subjectivity resides in a unique act of what Fichte called self positing where each subject is a point of absolute autonomy which means that it cannot be reduced to a moment in the network of causes and effects 8 Subjectivity applied edit One way that subjectivity has been conceptualized by philosophers such as Kierkegaard is in the context of religion 1 Religious beliefs can vary quite extremely from person to person but people often think that whatever they believe is the truth Subjectivity as seen by Descartes and Sartre was a matter of what was dependent on consciousness so because religious beliefs require the presence of a consciousness that can believe they must be subjective 1 This is in contrast to what has been proven by pure logic or hard sciences which does not depend on the perception of people and is therefore considered objective 1 Subjectivity is what relies on personal perception regardless of what is proven or objective 1 Many philosophical arguments within this area of study have to do with moving from subjective thoughts to objective thoughts with many different methods employed to get from one to the other along with a variety of conclusions reached 1 This is exemplified by Descartes deductions that move from reliance on subjectivity to somewhat of a reliance on God for objectivity 1 9 Foucault and Derrida denied the idea of subjectivity in favor of their ideas of constructs in order to account for differences in human thought 1 Instead of focusing on the idea of consciousness and self consciousness shaping the way humans perceive the world these thinkers would argue that it is instead the world that shapes humans so they would see religion less as a belief and more as a cultural construction 1 Others like Husserl and Sartre followed the phenomenological approach 1 This approach focused on the distinct separation of the human mind and the physical world where the mind is subjective because it can take liberties like imagination and self awareness where religion might be examined regardless of any kind of subjectivity 7 The philosophical conversation around subjectivity remains one that struggles with the epistemological question of what is real what is made up and what it would mean to be separated completely from subjectivity 1 In epistemology and theory of knowledge editAristotle s teacher Plato considered geometry to be a condition of his idealist philosophy concerned with universal truth clarification needed In Plato s Republic Socrates opposes the sophist Thrasymachus s relativistic account of justice and argues that justice is mathematical in its conceptual structure and that ethics was therefore a precise and objective enterprise with impartial standards for truth and correctness like geometry 10 The rigorous mathematical treatment Plato gave to moral concepts set the tone for the western tradition of moral objectivism that came after him citation needed His contrasting between objectivity and opinion became the basis for philosophies intent on resolving the questions of reality truth and existence He saw opinions as belonging to the shifting sphere of sensibilities as opposed to a fixed eternal and knowable incorporeality Where Plato distinguished between how we know things and their ontological status subjectivism such as George Berkeley s depends on perception 11 In Platonic terms a criticism of subjectivism is that it is difficult to distinguish between knowledge opinions and subjective knowledge 12 Platonic idealism is a form of metaphysical objectivism holding that the ideas exist independently from the individual Berkeley s empirical idealism on the other hand holds that things only exist as they are perceived Both approaches boast an attempt at objectivity Plato s definition of objectivity can be found in his epistemology which is based on mathematics and his metaphysics where knowledge of the ontological status of objects and ideas is resistant to change 11 In opposition to philosopher Rene Descartes method of personal deduction clarification needed natural philosopher Isaac Newton applied the relatively objective scientific method to look for evidence before forming a hypothesis 13 Partially in response to Kant s rationalism logician Gottlob Frege applied objectivity to his epistemological and metaphysical philosophies If reality exists independently of consciousness then it would logically include a plurality of indescribable forms Objectivity requires a definition of truth formed by propositions with truth value An attempt of forming an objective construct incorporates ontological commitments to the reality of objects 14 The importance of perception in evaluating and understanding objective reality is debated in the observer effect of quantum mechanics Direct or naive realists rely on perception as key in observing objective reality while instrumentalists hold that observations are useful in predicting objective reality The concepts that encompass these ideas are important in the philosophy of science Philosophies of mind explore whether objectivity relies on perceptual constancy 15 In ethics editMoral objectivism and relativism edit Moral objectivism is the view that what is right or wrong does not depend on what anyone thinks is right or wrong 4 Moral objectivism depends on how the moral code affects the well being of the people of the society Moral objectivism allows for moral codes to be compared to each other through a set of universal facts than mores of a society Nicholas Reschar defines mores as customs within every society e g what women can wear and states that moral codes cannot be compared to one s personal moral compass 4 An example is the categorical imperative of Immanuel Kant which says Act only according to that maxim i e rule whereby you can at the same time will that it become a universal law John Stuart Mill was a consequential thinker and therefore proposed utilitarianism which asserts that in any situation the right thing to do is whatever is likely to produce the most happiness overall Moral relativism is the view where an actor s moral codes are locally derived from their culture 16 The rules within moral codes are equal to each other and are only deemed right or wrong within their specific moral codes 16 Relativism is opposite to Universalism because there is not a single moral code for every agent to follow 16 Relativism differs from Nihilism because it validates every moral code that exists whereas nihilism does not 16 When it comes to relativism Russian philosopher and writer Fyodor Dostoevsky coined the phrase If God doesn t exist everything is permissible That phrase was his view of the consequences for rejecting theism as a basis of ethics American anthropologist Ruth Benedict argued that there is no single objective morality and that moral codes necessarily vary by culture 17 Ethical subjectivism edit See also David Hume Non cognitivism and Subjectivism The term ethical subjectivism covers two distinct theories in ethics According to cognitive versions of ethical subjectivism the truth of moral statements depends upon people s values attitudes feelings or beliefs Some forms of cognitivist ethical subjectivism can be counted as forms of realism others are forms of anti realism 18 David Hume is a foundational figure for cognitive ethical subjectivism On a standard interpretation of his theory a trait of character counts as a moral virtue when it evokes a sentiment of approbation in a sympathetic informed and rational human observer 19 Similarly Roderick Firth s ideal observer theory held that right acts are those that an impartial rational observer would approve of 20 William James another ethical subjectivist held that an end is good to or for a person just in the case it is desired by that person see also ethical egoism According to non cognitive versions of ethical subjectivism such as emotivism prescriptivism and expressivism ethical statements cannot be true or false at all rather they are expressions of personal feelings or commands 21 For example on A J Ayer s emotivism the statement Murder is wrong is equivalent in meaning to the emotive Murder Boo 22 Ethical objectivism edit Main article Moral realism According to the ethical objectivist the truth or falsehood of typical moral judgments does not depend upon the beliefs or feelings of any person or group of persons This view holds that moral propositions are analogous to propositions about chemistry biology or history in so much as they are true despite what anyone believes hopes wishes or feels When they fail to describe this mind independent moral reality they are false no matter what anyone believes hopes wishes or feels There are many versions of ethical objectivism including various religious views of morality Platonistic intuitionism Kantianism utilitarianism and certain forms of ethical egoism and contractualism Note that Platonists define ethical objectivism in an even more narrow way so that it requires the existence of intrinsic value Consequently they reject the idea that contractualists or egoists could be ethical objectivists Objectivism in turn places primacy on the origin of the frame of reference and as such considers any arbitrary frame of reference ultimately a form of ethical subjectivism by a transitive property even when the frame incidentally coincides with reality and can be used for measurements In history and historiography editHistory as a discipline has wrestled with notions of objectivity from its very beginning While its object of study is commonly thought to be the past the only thing historians have to work with are different versions of stories based on individual perceptions of reality and memory Several history streams developed to devise ways to solve this dilemma Historians like Leopold von Ranke 19th century have advocated for the use of extensive evidence especially archived physical paper documents to recover the bygone past claiming that as opposed to people s memories objects remain stable in what they say about the era they witnessed and therefore represent a better insight into objective reality 23 In the 20th century the Annales School emphasized the importance of shifting focus away from the perspectives of influential men usually politicians around whose actions narratives of the past were shaped and putting it on the voices of ordinary people 24 Postcolonial streams of history challenge the colonial postcolonial dichotomy and critique Eurocentric academia practices such as the demand for historians from colonized regions to anchor their local narratives to events happening in the territories of their colonizers to earn credibility 25 All the streams explained above try to uncover whose voice is more or less truth bearing and how historians can stitch together versions of it to best explain what actually happened The anthropologist Michel Rolph Trouillot developed the concepts of historicity 1 and 2 to explain the difference between the materiality of socio historical processes H1 and the narratives that are told about the materiality of socio historical processes H2 26 This distinction hints that H1 would be understood as the factual reality that elapses and is captured with the concept of objective truth and that H2 is the collection of subjectivities that humanity has stitched together to grasp the past Debates about positivism relativism and postmodernism are relevant to evaluating these concepts importance and the distinction between them Ethical considerations edit In his book Silencing the past Trouillot wrote about the power dynamics at play in history making outlining four possible moments in which historical silences can be created 1 making of sources who gets to know how to write or to have possessions that are later examined as historical evidence 2 making of archives what documents are deemed important to save and which are not how to classify materials and how to order them within physical or digital archives 3 making of narratives which accounts of history are consulted which voices are given credibility and 4 the making of history the retrospective construction of what The Past is 27 Because history official public familial personal informs current perceptions and how we make sense of the present whose voice gets to be included in it and how has direct consequences in material socio historical processes Thinking of current historical narratives as impartial depictions of the totality of events unfolded in the past by labeling them as objective risks sealing historical understanding Acknowledging that history is never objective and always incomplete has a meaningful opportunity to support social justice efforts Under said notion voices that have been silenced are placed on an equal footing to the grand and popular narratives of the world appreciated for their unique insight of reality through their subjective lens In sociology editSubjectivity is an inherently social mode that comes about through innumerable interactions within society As much as subjectivity is a process of individuation it is equally a process of socialization the individual never being isolated in a self contained environment but endlessly engaging in interaction with the surrounding world Culture is a living totality of the subjectivity of any given society constantly undergoing transformation 28 Subjectivity is both shaped by it and shapes it in turn but also by other things like the economy political institutions communities as well as the natural world Though the boundaries of societies and their cultures are indefinable and arbitrary the subjectivity inherent in each one is palatable and can be recognized as distinct from others Subjectivity is in part a particular experience or organization of reality which includes how one views and interacts with humanity objects consciousness and nature so the difference between different cultures brings about an alternate experience of existence that forms life in a different manner A common effect on an individual of this disjunction between subjectivities is culture shock where the subjectivity of the other culture is considered alien and possibly incomprehensible or even hostile Political subjectivity is an emerging concept in social sciences and humanities 3 Political subjectivity is a reference to the deep embeddedness of subjectivity in the socially intertwined systems of power and meaning Politicality writes Sadeq Rahimi in Meaning Madness and Political Subjectivity is not an added aspect of the subject but indeed the mode of being of the subject that is precisely what the subject is 29 See also edit nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Psychology portalDogma Factual relativism Intersubjectivity Journalistic objectivity Naive realism Objectivity science Objectivism Omniscience Phenomenology philosophy Phenomenology psychology Political subjectivity Q methodology Relativism Subject philosophy Transcendental subjectivity Subjectivity is Truth an existential interpretation of subjectivity by Soren Kierkegaard Self Vertiginous questionReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Solomon Robert C Subjectivity in Honderich Ted Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press 2005 p 900 Gonzalez Rey Fernando June 2019 Subjectivity in Debate Some Psychology Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 49 212 234 via EBCOhost a b Allen Amy 2002 Power Subjectivity and Agency Between Arendt and Foucault International Journal of Philosophical Studies 10 2 131 49 doi 10 1080 09672550210121432 S2CID 144541333 a b c Rescher Nicholas January 2008 Moral Objectivity Social Philosophy and Policy 25 1 393 409 doi 10 1017 S0265052508080151 S2CID 233358084 a b c Bykova Marina F February 2018 On the Problem of Subjectivity Editor s Introduction Russian Studies in Philosophy 56 1 5 via EBSCOhost a b Strazzoni Andrea 2015 Introduction Subjectivity and Individuality Two Strands in Early Modern Philosophy Societate Si Politica 9 via ProQuest a b c Thomas Baldwin Sartre Jean Paul in Honderich Ted Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press 2005 pp 834 837 Zizek Slavoj 2019 09 23 The Fall That Makes Us Like God Part I The Philosophical Salon Archived from the original on 2019 09 25 Retrieved 2019 09 25 Cottingham John Descartes Rene in Honderich Ted Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press 2005 p 201 205 Plato The Republic 337B HarperCollins Publishers 1968 a b E Douka Kabitoglou 1991 Shelley and Berkeley The Platonic Connection PDF 20 35 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Mary Margaret Mackenzie 1985 Plato s moral theory Journal of Medical Ethics 11 2 88 91 doi 10 1136 jme 11 2 88 PMC 1375153 PMID 4009640 Suzuki Fumitaka March 2012 The Cogito Proposition of Descartes and Characteristics of His Ego Theory PDF Bulletin of Aichi University of Education 61 73 80 Clinton Tolley Kant on the Generality of Logic PDF University of California San Diego a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tyler Burge Origins of Objectivity Oxford University Press 2010 a b c d Wreen Michael July 2018 What Is Moral Relativism Philosophy 93 3 337 354 doi 10 1017 S0031819117000614 S2CID 171526831 ProQuest 2056736032 Moral Relativism and Objectivism University of California Santa Cruz Retrieved 20 February 2019 Thomas Polzler 2018 How to Measure Moral Realism Review of Philosophy and Psychology 9 3 647 670 doi 10 1007 s13164 018 0401 8 PMC 6132410 PMID 30220945 Rayner Sam 2005 Hume s Moral Philosophy Macalester Journal of Philosophy 14 1 6 21 A Substantive Revision to Firth s Ideal Observer Theory PDF Stance Ball State University 3 55 61 April 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 06 12 Retrieved 2023 06 28 Marchetti Sarin 21 December 2010 William James on Truth and Invention in Morality European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy II 2 doi 10 4000 ejpap 910 24 231 Ethics Handout 3 Ayer s Emotivism PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Leopold von Ranke Author s Preface in History of the Reformation in Germany trans Sarah Austin vii xi London George Rutledge and Sons 1905 Andrea A 1991 Mentalities in history The Historian 53 3 605 608 Chakrabarty D 1992 Postcoloniality and the artifice of history Who speaks for Indian pasts Representations 37 1 26 doi 10 2307 2928652 Trouillot Michel Rolph 1995 Silencing the past power and the production of history Boston Mass Beacon Press Trouillot Michel Rolph 1995 Silencing the past power and the production of history Boston Mass Beacon Press Silverman H J ed 2014 Questioning foundations truth subjectivity and culture Routledge page needed Rahimi Sadeq 2015 Meaning Madness and Political Subjectivity A Study of Schizophrenia and Culture in Turkey Oxford amp New York Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 1138840829 Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2015 03 22 Further reading editBachelard Gaston La formation de l esprit scientifique contribution a une psychanalyse de la connaissance Paris Vrin 2004 ISBN 2 7116 1150 7 Beiser Frederick C 2002 German Idealism The Struggle Against Subjectivism 1781 1801 Harvard University Press Block Ned Flanagan Owen J amp Gzeldere Gven Eds The Nature of Consciousness Philosophical Debates Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 52210 6 Bowie Andrew 1990 Aesthetics and Subjectivity From Kant to Nietzsche Manchester Manchester University Press Castillejo David The Formation of Modern Objectivity Madrid Ediciones de Arte y Bibliofilia 1982 Dallmayr Winfried Reinhard 1981 Twilight of Subjectivity Contributions to a Post Individualist Theory Politics Amherst MA University of Massachusetts Press Ellis C amp Flaherty M 1992 Investigating Subjectivity Research on Lived Experience Newbury Park CA Sage ISBN 978 0 8039 4496 1 Farrell Frank B 1994 Subjectivity Realism and Postmodernism The Recovery of the World in Recent Philosophy Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press Gaukroger Stephen 2012 Objectivity Oxford University Press Johnson Daniel July 2003 On Truth As Subjectivity In Kierkegaard s Concluding Unscientific Postscript Quodlibet Journal 5 2 3 Archived from the original on 2017 06 24 Retrieved 2023 06 28 Kuhn Thomas S The Structure of Scientific Revolutions Chicago University of Chicago Press 1996 3rd ed ISBN 0 226 45808 3 Lauer Quentin 1958 The Triumph of Subjectivity An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology Fordham University Press Megill Allan Rethinking Objectivity London Duke UP 1994 Nagel Ernest The Structure of Science New York Brace and World 1961 Nagel Thomas The View from Nowhere Oxford Oxford UP 1986 Nozick Robert Invariances the structure of the objective world Cambridge Harvard UP 2001 Popper Karl R Objective Knowledge An Evolutionary Approach Oxford University Press 1972 ISBN 0 19 875024 2 Rescher Nicholas Objectivity the obligations of impersonal reason Notre Dame Notre Dame Press 1977 Rorty Richard Objectivity Relativism and Truth Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1991 Rousset Bernard La theorie kantienne de l objectivite Paris Vrin 1967 Scheffler Israel Science and Subjectivity Hackett 1982 Voices of Wisdom a multicultural philosophy reader KesslerExternal links edit nbsp Look up Subjectivity in Wiktionary the free dictionary Objectivity Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Subjectivity and Objectivity by Pete Mandik Subjectivity and objectivity philosophy at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Subjectivity and objectivity philosophy amp 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