Abstract
Are widely used measurements in the human sciences (say happiness surveys or depression scales) quantitative
or merely ordinal? If they are merely ordinal, could they be developed into quantitative measurements,
just like in the progression from thermoscopes to thermometers? Taking inspiration from recent
philosophy of measurement, some practitioners express optimism about future human science
measurements. The so-called quantity objection stands out for having the only chance of settling the
debate in favour of the pessimists. It claims that the problem lies not with current, or likely future, measurement
practices in the human sciences, but with human science attributes themselves—they just are
not quantitative, but merely ordinal. Hence, they cannot not (thus will not) be measured quantitatively.
The argument has a long and distinguished pedigree. This paper assesses old and recent versions of it,
namely: the objection made originally to Fechner’s psychophysics by von Kries (among others) and
Michell’s recent version of this objection. To do so, the paper first draws important distinctions between
different versions of the argument that have been overlooked. Then, it argues that none of the versions
of the quantity objection provide a good reason for the optimists to give up their optimism. In particular,
Michell’s argument characterizes the measurand (that is, the attribute to be measured) in a way that
optimists do not and need not accept. Yet the optimists’ defence articulated here brings with it serious
burdens to discharge. The ball is in their court.