Again: "The Picasso has aestetic value in my eyes" is true if I find it aesthetically pleasing. This just means that it is pleasing and interesting to me when I look at it. It need not be a property of the picture when no one is looking, or to everyone, in order for this to be true.
And "The spanner has value as a tool if I want to tighten the bolt" is true if I want to tighten the bolt and the spanner is the right size.
These things are facts.
Calling them "values" as opposed to facts sounds absurd. "'The spanner has value' is not a fact but a value." Wa?
Saying they are opinions is a bit weak, or can be misleading. Its not my "opinion" that the spanner has value, it actually does. It is useful, and therefore valueable (to me when I want to tighten those nuts and bolts). The value of the spanner in this context is not a matter of "mere opinion", it is a fact. Likewise, if I want to be pleased and interested when I look, then the Picasso is the 'tool' for me. It gets the job done, but in that artistic rather than the practical sense. It has aesthetic value to me at least, even if everyone else is turned off. If I say "It is my opinion that it is a great work of art, even if you disagree", which is a valid use of English, this in no way implies that the value it actually has for me is somehow not a fact. In fact, it is a fact, and it's that fact (having aesthetic value to me, turning me on, having power to "tighten my nuts and bolts" as it were) that causes me to express the opinion.
And "The spanner has value as a tool if I want to tighten the bolt" is true if I want to tighten the bolt and the spanner is the right size.
These things are facts.
Calling them "values" as opposed to facts sounds absurd. "'The spanner has value' is not a fact but a value." Wa?
Saying they are opinions is a bit weak, or can be misleading. Its not my "opinion" that the spanner has value, it actually does. It is useful, and therefore valueable (to me when I want to tighten those nuts and bolts). The value of the spanner in this context is not a matter of "mere opinion", it is a fact. Likewise, if I want to be pleased and interested when I look, then the Picasso is the 'tool' for me. It gets the job done, but in that artistic rather than the practical sense. It has aesthetic value to me at least, even if everyone else is turned off. If I say "It is my opinion that it is a great work of art, even if you disagree", which is a valid use of English, this in no way implies that the value it actually has for me is somehow not a fact. In fact, it is a fact, and it's that fact (having aesthetic value to me, turning me on, having power to "tighten my nuts and bolts" as it were) that causes me to express the opinion.
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