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5e and the Cheesecake Factory: Explaining Good Enough
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<blockquote data-quote="Ovinomancer" data-source="post: 8202473" data-attributes="member: 16814"><p>No, you're the one doing that. The quality of the steak on your plate will only be determined by your preference in that your preference set the condition for how that steak should be cooked. Your preference doesn't matter except as the goal for the quality of the preparation.</p><p></p><p>In other words, you can prefer medium rare, and I can prefer rare but I can, independent of you, judge the quality of the the steak you're delivered by how well it's preparation matches your order. If you get a well done steak, I don't have to share your preference to determine the quality of the preparation to be poor.</p><p></p><p>What if I prefer incomprehensibility? Then it would absolutely be a quality game, according to your argument that preferences drives quality.</p><p></p><p>Which has been my point for multiple posts and you've argued it with me. Odd.</p><p></p><p>That you have low bars because you're not interested in more isn't the judge of quality. And your low bars are just as susceptible to your argument about preference and anything else mentioned. You've created a situation where you say that things in Category A are immune to preference but things in Category B are entirely preference, but failed to establish any metric for determining if a thing is in A or B except that you say it is. This is a bad argument.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ovinomancer, post: 8202473, member: 16814"] No, you're the one doing that. The quality of the steak on your plate will only be determined by your preference in that your preference set the condition for how that steak should be cooked. Your preference doesn't matter except as the goal for the quality of the preparation. In other words, you can prefer medium rare, and I can prefer rare but I can, independent of you, judge the quality of the the steak you're delivered by how well it's preparation matches your order. If you get a well done steak, I don't have to share your preference to determine the quality of the preparation to be poor. What if I prefer incomprehensibility? Then it would absolutely be a quality game, according to your argument that preferences drives quality. Which has been my point for multiple posts and you've argued it with me. Odd. That you have low bars because you're not interested in more isn't the judge of quality. And your low bars are just as susceptible to your argument about preference and anything else mentioned. You've created a situation where you say that things in Category A are immune to preference but things in Category B are entirely preference, but failed to establish any metric for determining if a thing is in A or B except that you say it is. This is a bad argument. [/QUOTE]
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5e and the Cheesecake Factory: Explaining Good Enough
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