micahclay wrote:ThaRegul8r wrote:PockyCandy wrote:I enjoy watching Jamal Crawford as much as any player in the NBA.
This isn't an opinion though, it's your subjective preference. No one can reasonably take issue with what players someone likes to watch.
Is subjective preference not an opinion?
opinion: a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.
preference: a greater liking for one alternative over another or others.
"I'd rather watch Player X than any other player in the league." Preference.
"Player X is the best player (one can replace "best" with any other adjective one wishes) in the league." Opinion.
Preferences are not arguable. If someone likes X over Y, that's solely a matter of individual taste.
Opinions are arguable. As Oxford says, they aren't necessarily (and frequently aren't) based on fact or knowledge.
If someone prefers Coke over Pepsi, I don't feel the same way, but I can't say that they're wrong since it's subjective. A preference is simply a liking. A preference is not an opinion. No one has an opinion that they like something, they either like it, they don't, or they're indifferent. I like this or that, and that's not open for debate. I like what I like. I may have an opinion about this or that, which may or may not be informed. If someone's of the opinion that Allen Iverson is the greatest player in NBA history (to take an example I've actually seen before), people can say that that opinion is false, as, contrary to popular belief, opinions can be wrong. Now in these such cases, people espouse views based on their subjective preferences, but they're two different things.