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objectivity

The process of not being stupid, and therefore an attempt at being smart.
The modern world is characterized by a percentage of objectivity. The dark ages is characterized by a overwhelming percentage of faith. The post-modern world is characterized by overwhelming nihilism.
objectivity by bob November 2, 2003

Objectivity Bias

A cognitive bias where someone believes their own perspective is purely objective while everyone else’s is biased. It’s the assumption that “I see reality as it is; you see it through a distorted lens.” This bias prevents self‑reflection, because acknowledging one’s own biases would threaten the cherished identity of being objective. It often appears in debates, where each side claims to be impartial and accuses the other of ideology. Objectivity bias is the foundation of intellectual arrogance—the unearned certainty that one’s own view is the view from nowhere.
Example: “He dismissed her criticism as ‘political,’ then presented his own opinion as ‘just common sense.’ Objectivity bias: mistaking his own perspective for reality itself.”
Objectivity Bias by Abzugal May 1, 2026

Objectivity Demarcation Problem

The core challenge in science and philosophy: how to distinguish an objective claim (true independent of observers) from a subjective one (dependent on a point of view). Since all observation is theory-laden and filtered through human senses and instruments, pure objectivity might be an impossible ideal. The "problem" is that every method we create to ensure objectivity (double-blind trials, peer review) is itself a socially constructed process. We demarcate the objective as that which survives these constructed filters, but the line is always provisional.
Example: "Two scientists saw the same data curve. One called it random noise; the other, a significant signal. The Objectivity Demarcation Problem is that their prior beliefs—their subjective 'priors'—dictated where they drew the line. Their argument wasn't about the data, but about where to place the demarcation between objective pattern and subjective illusion. Even statistics, our tool for objectivity, requires a subjective choice: the p-value threshold."

Objectivity Bias

The mistaken belief that a truly "objective" perspective is possible or necessary for valid knowledge, used to dismiss viewpoints that are explicitly situated, personal, or experiential. It ignores that all observation is theory-laden and all knowers have a position. This bias falsely equates impartiality with truth, often to delegitimize marginalized voices whose "objectivity" has been historically denied by the very systems they critique.
Example: Dismissing a Indigenous community's knowledge about local ecosystem changes because it's "anecdotal" and "not objective science," while privileging sparse satellite data, commits Objectivity Bias. It rejects a deep, situated observational history in favor of a distant, "neutral" measurement that may miss crucial, on-the-ground nuances.
Objectivity Bias by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026

Objectivity Bias

A cognitive bias where a person believes their own views constitute objective reality, unbiased facts, and neutral truth—while dismissing anyone who disagrees as biased, delusional, psychotic, or schizophrenic. Unlike confirmation bias (seeking evidence that confirms existing beliefs), objectivity bias is meta-cognitive: it's not just about what you believe, but about how you evaluate your own believing. The objectivity-bias sufferer doesn't think they have a perspective; they think they have the perspective. Everyone else is distorted by ideology, emotion, or mental illness. This bias is epidemic in the 2020s, where political discourse has become a hall of mirrors: each side sees itself as clear-eyed realists and the other as brainwashed cult members. Objectivity bias makes dialogue impossible because it pathologizes disagreement—if you're not seeing reality, you must be crazy, not just different.
Example: "He couldn't understand how anyone could disagree with his political views. It wasn't that they had different values or information; they were simply 'brainwashed,' 'delusional,' 'living in an alternate reality.' Objectivity bias had convinced him that his perspective was not a perspective but reality itself. Everyone else was biased; he was just correct. The irony was invisible to him, which is how objectivity bias works."
Objectivity Bias by Dumu The Void February 18, 2026

Objectivity Perspectivism

The application of perspectivism to objectivity—the view that objectivity is not achieved by escaping perspective but by multiplying perspectives, by seeing from many angles, by incorporating multiple standpoints. Objectivity Perspectivism argues that the traditional ideal of objectivity—the view from nowhere—is not only impossible but undesirable. Real objectivity comes from acknowledging your perspective, understanding its limits, and seeking out other perspectives to correct and enrich your own. Objectivity Perspectivism is the philosophy of strong objectivity, of situated knowledge, of the recognition that the best truth is the one that has been seen from the most angles.
Example: "She used to think objectivity meant having no perspective. Objectivity Perspectivism showed her otherwise: objectivity meant having many perspectives, holding them together, letting them correct each other. Her view was partial; so was everyone's. The goal wasn't to escape partiality but to assemble as many partial views as possible into something richer. Objectivity wasn't absence; it was abundance."
Objectivity Perspectivism by Abzugal February 21, 2026