More on FAQ #317
Millions of things in life are both “subjective” and “trustworthy.”
If we trusted nothing in life that is “subjective,” we could barely function.
All photographs are subjective, so anyone who has ever taken a photo that they trust understands how things can be both “subjective” and “trustworthy.”
Other examples:
A genuine declaration of affection to a loved one is usually “subjective” but not “untrustworthy.” The same can be said of a coach’s assessment of a player’s skills, a teacher’s assessment of a student’s capabilities, and a doctor’s assessment of a patient’s condition.
If “subjective” means “providing one perspective among many possible perspectives,”
then every recollection, every report, and every portrayal of anything is “subjective”—
— from newspaper articles to court depositions to photographs to a spouse’s recounting of their day —
—but that obviously doesn’t mean that these things are never “trustworthy.”
