Beauty, and the Intersubjective - Carter Jobe

 As kids, through our schooling, we are taught that all statements can be one of two things: either subjective or objective. However, during in-class discussion, the topic of a third classification came up, the "intersubjective."

This can be defined as something inherently subjective, but with which the general opinion is practically uniform, to an extent, we think of it in our mind as something objective. A perfect example is money. It would seem objective to state that money has value; however, this principle is only widely accepted because we all agree that it is this way. We all assign this value to money collectively.

In regard to beauty, many would state it is entirely subjective. While this may be partially true, let us observe the heart of someone pure with a kind soul. Everyone would find this person's soul to contain beauty; it is inherently good. In this sense, we can explore beauty as something intersubjective, as there are always hints of fact and opinion behind a statement about beauty.

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