originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'd say there are some elements of wine that are susceptible to qualitative analysis but they are fewer than most people think..
Once again:
Points are quantitative.
Everything we do here is qualitative.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'd say there are some elements of wine that are susceptible to qualitative analysis but they are fewer than most people think..
originally posted by Rahsaan:
Points are quantitative.
Everything we do here is qualitative.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Bad word, everything.
74 points.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Florida Jim:
In the end, you like it or you don't.
And while I would like very much to entertain "a deeper understanding" of the wines I drink, it is all about preferences.
Relative preferences.
Best, Jim
I don't understand the questions.originally posted by Bwood:
Is what you are saying is just that the relative judgments you make are just personal and a matter of taste and not a discerning of some independently existing category of quality, in the vlm sense?
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by mlawton:
Hey, I can disagree again! Expensive, certainly. But still cheaper than Allemand at what I see for US retail.
Yes, but I love Allemand and Verset and like Voge and find Clape boring so the price differential is well worth it to me.
I guess that's sort of where I'm coming from. When you have Clape in a line-up with other top producers, it never seems to be as interesting.
That isn't to say it isn't good wine, it just isn't $80 good to me.
No, they're simply an ordering system. They have no inherent value. 89 means that I like it more than 88. That's all, nothing more. And they are useful in the sense that they force the issue -- they demand a decision where words alone can (often deliberately) mislead or be ambiguous.originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
I'd say there are some elements of wine that are susceptible to qualitative analysis but they are fewer than most people think..
Once again:
Points are quantitative.
originally posted by VLM:
Come onAll of you folks railing against hierarchies are being intellectually dishonest.
We all have them. It is more difficult to argue for them than to take the post-modern bullshit way out towards relativism. I find relativism to be the worst kind of intellectual laziness.
Is there really not a qualitative difference between Mugnier and Magnien that can be quantified? It doesn't have to be interval in scale, but it can certainly be ordinal.
My guess is also that if we to compile these ordinal level data across Disorderlies then we would have something with actual meaning. And it would be hierarchical. Perhaps this should cross list in the Kant post.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
No, they're simply an ordering system. They have no inherent value. 89 means that I like it more than 88. That's all, nothing more..
And what about the numbers that come after the dollar sign?originally posted by Rahsaan:
Yet, I still draw the distinction between quantitative measurements of opinions (Points) and qualitative values of wine.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
And what about the numbers that come after the dollar sign?
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
No, they're simply an ordering system. They have no inherent value. 89 means that I like it more than 88. That's all, nothing more. And they are useful in the sense that they force the issue -- they demand a decision where words alone can (often deliberately) mislead or be ambiguous.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
I don't understand the questions.originally posted by Bwood:
Is what you are saying is just that the relative judgments you make are just personal and a matter of taste and not a discerning of some independently existing category of quality, in the vlm sense?
Best, Jim
originally posted by Bwood:
. . . but maybe it's been beat to death anyway.
originally posted by MarkS:
I thought this was a thread about Cornas.
originally posted by MarkS:
I thought this was a thread about Cornas.
Silly me.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Perhaps, but we shouldn't let boredom stand in our way.
Really, I think VLM and I are at different ends of the continum; he likes some objective measure in wine evaluation, I don't.
Undoubtedly, the truth lies somewhere between.
And the next time he and I are drinking together, we'll likely both get over it.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: As did, Bwood, your use of "beat" as a past participle. How old-school!