
Originally Posted by
DonkeyMoses
There have been several threads on this board in which differing opinions have lead to ensueing arguments. Opinions are fine, everybody has them. A little disscussion as to why you hold that opinion and disagree with others is good mental sparing and makes the world that much more interesting. It keeps me on my game. But I think one thing that is lost site of and causes thought provoking debates to become just plain provoking is not having a clear delineation between opinion and flat out judgement. I'm not talking about pounding a gavel and condemning people for their opinions, I'm talking about making a statement that involves a subjectivity implied to the object of disscussion itself rather than simply how you feel about it. I've tried to make this discernment in context of the given arguments, but the point of it gets burried in with the other variables of the argument. Forgive me if I make anlologies and give examples that I have used in other threads, but I would like to isolate this point.
An opinion is "I like it" a judgement is "it is good". Just because you like something does not make the thing you like good. It just means that you like it. An opinion states a belief or feeling about the subject that sits with the speaker. A judgement implies an absolute that sits with the subject itself outside of any individual perspective. "I don't like applesauce" is an opinion. "applesauce is bad." is a judgement. Applesauce isn't good or bad. It's applesauce. Without subjectivity it's mashed apples with sugar and cinnamon. Even if you have extreme reason to hate applesauce, even if applesauce killed your dog, it's still just applesauce. If I like it, it doesn't mean I want to kill your dog. I don't even know your dog.
If there was a sports related thread here, I could get on and say that I'm not into sports, never have been, and explain why. We can disscuss it from there from our own perspectives and have a interesting debate. But If I come on and say "Sports is stupid. I hate jocks, they're all big and dumb." that is a judgement. That means I have decided what sports inherrantly is outside of myself and my opinion. That if I dissapeared from the face of the earth, sports would still be what I have stated it to be. I could even leave it at I hate jocks and it would be my opinion, but going on to claim what all jocks are is a negative judgement and is more inflammatory than it needs to be. Chances are, I wouldn't chime in on a thread about something I didn't like in the first place, much less insinuate that the people on the thread are dumb or missguided.
Stating IMO before a judgment call does not release it from being a judgement any more than saying "excuse me" in a crowded hallway gives one liscense to push someone out of your way. Example, In my opinion, all black people have rythm. In my opinion, French people are all gay. In my opinion, applesauce is a tool of Satan. Statements like that are only inflammatory. "In my opinion, >subject< is bad and holds no redeeming value, is based in something else that is bad, and leads to something else that I have decided is evil." almost always brings about the interpretation that anyone who feels differently about >subject< is wrong and therefore bad too. Even if this is not stated directly, even if it's not an intended subtext of the original statement, it is implied by the absolute put upon >subject< and leaves little room for discussion other than interpreting the statement as an assault upon one's character.
I realize, for the record, the potentially ironic slippery slope of judging judgement, but you'll notice I didn't say judgement is bad, only that it is not the same as opinion and can raise the ire of others. It's not a good tactic for debate and often leaves the speaker looking closed minded and those rebutting looking as though they're hassling someone about their opinions.
But that's just my opinion.
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