objectivity gets such a bad rap because positivists and empiricists keep beating us over the head with the ridiculous notion that only things that can be "statistically analyzed" are capable of being objective but that's patently false.

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objectivity gets such a bad rap because positivists and empiricists keep beating us over the head with the ridiculous notion that only things that can be "statistically analyzed" are capable of being objective but that's patently false.
They (the positivists) created careful measures of the external behavior of individuals to produce quantitative data that could be subjeted to statistical analysis (objectivism). It grew because competition among researchers for prestige and status combined with other pressures, including funds from private foundations (eg. Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, etc), university administrators who wanted to avoid unconventional politics, a desire for researchers for a public image of serious professionalism, and the information needs of expanding government and corporate bureaucracies.
Lawrence Neuman in «The Meanings of Methodology», p. 70
The positivists have a simple solution: the world must be divided into that which we can say clearly and the rest, which we had better pass over in silence. But can any one conceive of a more pointless philosophy, seeing that what we can say clearly amounts to next to nothing? If we omitted all that is unclear we would probably be left with completely uninteresting and trivial tautologies.
Werner Heisenberg, Physics and Beyond - Encounters and Conversations
Even if we could get our hands—or rather our minds, which is to say our brains—on those masses of numbers, could they ever absorb the masses of meaning and mattering, the standards of reasoning and behaving to which we submit ourselves in order to live lives that are not only coherent to ourselves but coherent to one another—and coherent to ourselves at least in large part because they are, or we know how to go about making them, coherent to one another? All of that and more goes into constituting the shared world in which we do our living, and without which there is no life that is recognizably a life.
Character of "Plato," p. 417 of Rebecca Newberger Goldstein's Plato at the Googleplex: Why Philosophy Won't Go Away
Whatever can be known by one person can, in principle, be known by everybody, just so long as they master the techniques for knowing that are most appropriate to a field. If it can't be generally known, if it is irreducibly embedded in a single and singular point of view, then we can have no good reason to accept it. This is the Epistemology of the Reasonable, and it is one side of Plato's divided soul and informs not only most of philosophy (with a few kinky exceptions like, possibly, Heidegger) but all of the sciences. Philosophy-jeerers who argue from science are unaware that they are epistemological allies with the bulk of philosophers, and depend on the Epistemology of the Reasonable that philosophers have hammered out for their convenience.
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, pp. 375 - 376 Plato at the Googleplex: Why Philosophy Won't Go Away
"The positivists have a simple solution: the world must be divided into that which we can say clearly and the rest, which we had better pass over in silence. But can any one conceive of a more pointless philosophy, seeing that what we can say clearly amounts to next to nothing? If we omitted all that is unclear we would probably be left with completely uninteresting and trivial tautologies."
-Werner Heisenberg