Moreover, we don’t generally take these facts to be mere records of our subjective preferences or of cultural norms.
The Universe Knows Right from Wrong - Issue 89: The Dark Side|Philip Goff|September 9, 2020|Nautilus
These algorithms may seem mathematical and objective, but Woolley says the system is “incredibly subjective,” with many human decisions behind how and why particular content gets recommended.
Why Facebook’s political-ad ban is taking on the wrong problem|Tate Ryan-Mosley|September 6, 2020|MIT Technology Review
There is still almost no scientific understanding of how the “boops” of electrochemical pulses in the brain become the subjective experience of thinking, feeling, or remembering.
Neurologists aren’t so sure about Elon Musk’s Neuralink brain implant startup|dzanemorris|August 31, 2020|Fortune
However, judging the quality of writing is highly subjective.
Content marketing fails: How to analyze and improve|Michael Doer|August 27, 2020|Search Engine Watch
Of course, measuring emotions is highly complex, and given how subjective and multifaceted they are, quantitative measurements will never entirely displace the qualitative element of evaluating and describing what we’re thinking and feeling.
5 companies that want to track your emotions|jakemeth|August 22, 2020|Fortune
The whole goal is to create an effective experience of fear, which is subjective.
Sex, Blood, and Screaming: Blackout’s Dark Frights|Tim Teeman|October 7, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Unless you can find good criticism, which is hard to do, because you get too subjective.
Al Pacino Does What He Wants to Do: 'The Humbling,' Scorsese, and That 'Scarface' Remake|Alex Suskind|September 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The subjective and unverifiable nature of pain is one of the most challenging aspects of managing it.
DEA's Painkiller Crackdown Too Little, Too Late?|Russell Saunders|August 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
These results, of course, are subjective and totally unscientific.
Are Water Filters B.S.?|Michael Schulson|August 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“The subject area in question is subjective and ambiguous,” he wrote.
Fired From Los Alamos for Pushing Obama's Nuclear Agenda|Center for Public Integrity|July 31, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Hence the former have been called objective, the latter, subjective laws.
Mental Philosophy: Including the Intellect, Sensibilities, and Will|Joseph Haven
It is the subjective view as opposed to the objective views of the critics.
Complete Prose Works|Walt Whitman
This is the subjective side of it, the unconscious, instinctive, mystical motive so often observed.
The Psychology of Nations|G.E. Partridge
Subjective auditory sensations appear to be much less frequent causes of dream-illusions than corresponding visual sensations.
Illusions|James Sully
Moral activity is usually accompanied by a subjective feeling of enjoyment.
A Critical History of Greek Philosophy|W. T. Stace
British Dictionary definitions for subjective
subjective
/ (səbˈdʒɛktɪv) /
adjective
belonging to, proceeding from, or relating to the mind of the thinking subject and not the nature of the object being considered
of, relating to, or emanating from a person's emotions, prejudices, etcsubjective views
relating to the inherent nature of a person or thing; essential
existing only as perceived and not as a thing in itself
med(of a symptom, condition, etc) experienced only by the patient and incapable of being recognized or studied by anyone else
grammardenoting a case of nouns and pronouns, esp in languages having only two cases, that identifies the subject of a finite verb and (in formal use in English) is selected for predicate complements, as in It is ISee also nominative (def. 1)