What's the difference between a subject and an object?

What's the difference between a subject and an object?

I and thou.

Pseud here

Subjective: the apple is red
Objective: the surface of the apple absorbs all light except for light with a wavelength of 400 nanometers

Welcome to the wonderful world of semantics! These terms are not very precisely defined, but to give you a simple answer:

subject - that which performs an action
object - that which is acted upon

So in "The dog ate the apple" the dog is the subject because he's performing the eating action, and the apple is the (direct) object because the eating is being performed on it.

there isnt

K so the subject remains a subject insofar as he's unaware of the actions being performed on himself...

Explains A LOT

Subject sounds like the modern version of the soul

nah it's I and It, if ur goin buber

this is stupid af

This post is lit AF senpai #whoup #realniggahours #clicclike

XD

lel

Those are both the same thing, though.

...

The student's name?

Albert Einstein

Ephemeral linguistic constructs.

which one?

>"Pseud here"
>thinks scientific descriptions are objective
Oh it shows

>thinks science is objective
>thinks calling something "red" is necessarily not scientific
>doesn't understand language

but most of all:

>Thinks the question was objectivity vs subjectivity because he can't read good.

Albert.

THIS IS BAIT YOU DUMB FUCKS

The subject is that which knows; the object that which is known. How it took 18 replies before this right answer was revealed is beyond me.

The subject is percipient and the object is the thing being perceived. The subject is observant and the object is the thing being observed.

You understand?

The object is never known

>insofar as he's unaware of the actions being performed on himself...
No.

laughed.

he doesnt mean known as in "understood completely" he means it like "observe"

I suspect the original reply was a work of literature.