claim
active
claim:what-is-truly-liked-may-be-different-from-what-is-apparently-liked-this-is-a-matter-of-judgment-and-knowledge-not-opinionWhat is truly liked may be different from what is apparently liked; this is a matter of judgment and knowledge, not opinion.
The epistemological distinction crucial to the argument.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Assertion of convergence among deep personal preferences.
- Definition of genuine liking as originating in a pre-conceptual, child-like authenticity.
- Final point suggesting that deep liking connects us with universal reality.
- Linking real liking to self-discovery.
- The diagnostic question for distinguishing genuine liking from artificial or conventional preference.
- Distinction between superficial and deep preference.
- The genuine, deep pleasure that comes from the whole person and childish truthfulness—distinguished from wilfulness, professional posturing, or pleasing others' expectations.
- From the West Dean experience: the north wall alone required approximately 500 such judgments.