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7/17/2019 fdx lol http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fdx-lol 1/1 What Is The Difference Between "Facts" and "Opinions"? by NICHOLAS CLAIRMONT OVER 2 YEARS AGO  40  10  1 That's just like, your opinion, man. -The Dude It is a fact that the pyramids are in Egypt. It is a fact that raping children i s wrong. It is a fact that two plus two is four. It is a fact that Odysseus's wi fe is named Penelope. I just identified four things as facts, and I expect that none of those four sen tences would be challenged in normal conversation. Yet they are all very differe nt types of statement (geographical, moral, mathematical, and fictional, to be p recise). However, if I said that it is a fact that abortion is morally acceptable, or tha t there is no god, I would almost certainly be told that those are opinions. Fur ther, I might be told that expressing those opinions as if they were facts const itutes a failure to "respect others' opinions". Which raises the question: What is the difference between facts and opinions? Given my examples, there seems to be an obvious answer: Things which are still s ocially undecided are opinions. Opinions are putative facts. That is certainly the line taken by those who deny that Earthling organisms evol ve through a process of natural selection. ("Teach the Controversy") But that can't be right. If we mean anything at all when we identify something a s a fact, it is not a fact by virtue of not being disagreed with. For: evolution  did not become a fact when it was posited by Darwin, or when it was vindicated by successive scientists. It has been a fact that organisms evolve through a pro cess of natural selection since organisms have evolved through a process of natu ral selection.

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7/17/2019 fdx lol

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fdx-lol 1/1

What Is The Difference Between "Facts" and "Opinions"?

by NICHOLAS CLAIRMONT

OVER 2 YEARS AGO 40 10 1That's just like, your opinion, man.

-The Dude

It is a fact that the pyramids are in Egypt. It is a fact that raping children is wrong. It is a fact that two plus two is four. It is a fact that Odysseus's wife is named Penelope.

I just identified four things as facts, and I expect that none of those four sentences would be challenged in normal conversation. Yet they are all very different types of statement (geographical, moral, mathematical, and fictional, to be precise).

However, if I said that it is a fact that abortion is morally acceptable, or that there is no god, I would almost certainly be told that those are opinions. Further, I might be told that expressing those opinions as if they were facts const

itutes a failure to "respect others' opinions".

Which raises the question: What is the difference between facts and opinions?

Given my examples, there seems to be an obvious answer: Things which are still socially undecided are opinions. Opinions are putative facts.

That is certainly the line taken by those who deny that Earthling organisms evolve through a process of natural selection. ("Teach the Controversy")

But that can't be right. If we mean anything at all when we identify something as a fact, it is not a fact by virtue of not being disagreed with. For: evolution did not become a fact when it was posited by Darwin, or when it was vindicated

by successive scientists. It has been a fact that organisms evolve through a process of natural selection since organisms have evolved through a process of natural selection.