Your only explanation is that "objective" means what you want it to mean. I have already explained my rationale and you cannot accept it, so you're sealioning.
Nope. That's not what I said. I've given my explanation for what objective means to me and I'll give it again if you need me to, you havent, nor have you attempted to explain what it means in regards to your argument. I have no idea what objective means to you given your description of it so I'm asking for it. I recognize that people may have different definitions of things, maybe we're just using the word differently, that's entirely possible.
I didn't say society had feelings. It's assessing whether or not Semenya's feelings have any special significance to the way society determines such social matters as "fairness in sports."
What? Any
significance to society, sounds to me like a reflection of societies feelings. This begs the question what you mean by
significance.
Then why do you argue that Semenya's feelings trump her physical biology?
I don't know what
trump is in reference to. I said no such thing and argued no such thing. Her doctor isnt unaware of her biology and still classified her as a female when she was born. The point there is that objective biology doesn't make for objective classification.
And your attempt to conflate jargon with the demotic use of words remains fallacious.
What jargon are you accusing me of conflating specifically?
No, laws are not purely subjective because without them societies cannot survive.
That doesn't mean they aren't subjective. Not everyone wants every society to survive. I'm not interested in the survival of slaver societies for instance.
A theoretical independent observer of all human societies would see that as being as objective as the composition of the moon.
What's objective is that socities have rules. Objectivity doesn't make any judgements about the rules themselves. It's basically a type of tautological statement because a society is itself an group of people organized around a particular set of values and/or goals. You can't have organization without rules. That doesn't make any societies particular rules objective. The rules each society lives by are still a reflection of the sentiments of the people in that society.
You may not like the laws of this or that society, but your personal feelings do not overrule the objective fact that societies need laws to survive.
So what? Who was arguing that
rules themselves aren't a necessary compenent to organization and society? I wasn't.
Champions of trans ideology are not just randomly throwing out their feelings any more than anti-trans; both parties want to make the agendas based on their feelings part of established law.
The need for a law that determines whether or not trans competition in sports is lawful is something both sides agree on, and they both present reasons for their agendas based on both subjective and objective arguments.
Yep, that's what my argument regarding subjectivity is all about.
Your bs argument remains massively flawed, as I've shown above.
What b.s.? The argument that objective biological facts do not make for objective laws or classifications is my argument. Are you confused?
The insurance companies were not the source of the objective observations. Patients who claimed that their pain was alleviated by acupuncture would have been the logical source for the companies' decision to grant limited validation of the pain-relief technique. The companies didn't validate the technique out of the goodness of their hearts or out of scientific curiosity; they overruled the earlier paradigm from materialistic science-- nothing is going on with acupuncture because we can't show the process-- because patients kept stumping for it and insurance companies wanted to attract more customers.
What? Do you think there hasn't been some scientific confirmation of the benefits of acupuncture since then? I don't understand your insurance company argument.