(04-21-2016, 07:37 AM)MarshalArtist Wrote: I think yours is an example of where an opinion can also be a fact. It is a fact that you had that experience and I couldn't then say, "No, you didn't have that experience," because you did. That will always be true whether I want it to be or not. When you and I have a different experience of the same thing, our two considered opinions differ based on the fact that you had one experience and I had another that was different from yours. Both are equally supported; however, instead of just saying "that's just your opinion," I think you and I would wonder what caused the difference in our experiences. This is because it is not just our opinion but an actual difference in the experience we've had. Are you wrong? Of course you are because I'm always right, ha ha. No, you're not wrong and neither am I about our experience of the product.
Now, say everyone else here has an experience that is similar to yours and dissimilar to mine. Wouldn't that indicate to anyone but the most stubborn of people that my experience is atypical and that your conclusion carries more weight than mine? I know I would be led to think I might be making an error or have some condition beyond my control that changes how I experience that soap. It would be ludicrous for me to then say, "I don't care what you say. This soap is bad, and what all of you say about it is just your opinion." That's because it isn't just your opinion. The only thing I could say about that soap is that I don't prefer to use it because I can't get it to work like all of you can. I cannot say that soap is terrible because it's clearly not since everyone here but me has a good experience.
So, I'll stop here. Thank you to those who read to the end.
I have to address this...Facts are immutable. A fact is the same, regardless of the person experiencing said fact. 20*F is a cold temperature, no matter who goes outside. Whether it is tolerable or intolerable is an opinion, but the temperature is cold, regardless of your tolerance level. 1+1=2, no matter who does the math, nor how they come to the conclusion. Any other answer is not an opinion, it is wrong. This is a fact...provable, immutable, and unchanged by individual experience.
With that said, very little in a soap review can be concluded to be a fact. The brand, scent profile, ingredients, intended purpose, color, consistency...the "facts" of the review end there, for the most part.
Clearly, reviews do not end there, however, from this point forward everything else is an opinion. Latherability, slickness, scent strength, post shave, glide, protection...all opinions. A learned opinion, a beginner's opinion, a scientifically achieved opinion, or a paid opinion is a qualitative label only...they are all opinions.
Do I value the opinions of the highly experienced over the brand new shaver? Absolutely. I would be foolish not to, as the experienced user clearly has a broader basis of comparison, lending more value and credence to their opinion. But to call it a fact is erroneous at best, regardless of the method used to obtain said opinion.
When I go shopping for a new motorcycle, I bring my friend who has been riding on and off road for more years than I have been alive. He has ridden everything from 500cc 2-strokes that will kill mortals for fun to great big old v8 Boss Hoss cruisers. He has a million miles of highway and track experience. His opinion matters to me. But it is still an opinion based solely on his experiences at the controls. The only "facts": are the size, horsepower, frame/chassis dimensions, displacement, etc, etc...
The manner in which one achieves the experience by which they develop their opinion does not make their opinion a fact. Their opinion is still an opinion. Their experience can be used to add or subtract value with the opinion, but it cannot make an opinion into a fact.