Friday, September 2, 2011

Intersubjective claim


According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, inter-subjective is defined as involving two separate thoughts and establishing more than two themes. Some minds think alike, while others have different thoughts and opinions. For example, if one person believes that God exists and two other people are atheist, this becomes an inter-subjective claim because there are different thoughts at hand.

As we learned earlier from one of the prompts assigned, a subjective claim will convey one’s feelings and there is no way of telling if the claim can be proven true or false. Inter-subjective claims can’t always be certain as well because they are biased off of two different minds.

Intersubjective claims can coincide with one another and they happen to share some characteristics, but they will mostly contrast. 

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