M
Mjölnir
Guest
You have not been able to provide facts that support your claim. If it was a fact that movie quality is not subjective then you would be able to prove it easily, just as you can prove other scientific facts.I didn't leave that conversation, I had already provided some (albeit incomplete) explanation. I admit it wasn't complete, but a complete explanation would exceed the length of anything either of us has ever posted here. I'm also not going to repost the arguments I posted. Use the search function.
Basically, everybody can have an opinion on anything, if you ask them. But not all opinions are equal as you believe. As a general rule, the more intelligent and informed the person is (and sometimes, the more detached), the more valuable their opinion, and that is true of any subject, with the exception of subjects like homeopathy where there are no experts because the subject is fake.
You might deny this, but I'm sure it's not how you live your life. If you had a daughter, and you wanted her to learn music and assuming you are sufficiently well-off, you would pay for music lessons, because you believe, deep down and despite your protests to the contrary, that there is such a thing as objectively better music, at least on average. And so it would be for all the arts and indeed all human activity. You can argue that music and storytelling, ok fine. But if you had any ambition yourself to become a storyteller, I am certain that you would read some material on how to write stories, that you would get help to make the product better -- which proves that you believe that there is such a thing as better.
Can we be ever know exactly how good a movie is? Well, can we ever know the exact mass of the electron? No, but we can make a very good approximation, sometimes. Thor 2 has a 50% score among top critics, so that's a decent approximation, and admittedly, it proves I'm probably too harsh on the movie.
You now go on to saying something different than what you stated before. And no, you can not have a valid opinion about anything. You can however have it with enjoyment of art though, and "good" is a subjective word unless you previously define the parameters for what it is supposed to mean for a given analysis. There are no widely accepted parameters for what constitutes a good movie and that would be absolutely necessary to claim that movie quality isn't subjective.
The music example isn't something I would agree with. I would pay for music lessons because it would be a good method of getting her technically proficient in playing an instrument, or singing. It wouldn't have to do with what kind of music she would ultimately like to play, nor are there any accepted parameters to judge music objectively on a wide basis. There's more technically advanced music, and there's also music that's more popular than other, but that certainly does not mean that either are more rewarding for any given individual.
Anyone that would go by critics to judge what a good movie is would be a person I would think either has low self esteem or is weak willed. I don't think you're being too hard on TDW if you say what you thought about it. You do come across as someone that spends quite a lot of time with things you do not enjoy, which is not my preferred thing to do but it's your choice and it doesn't affect me.
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