I have tried to stay out of this discussion but Mr. Korent's recent post prompts me to share some thoughts.
It is a simple truth that we all come to the topic of model shipbuilding (or really any topic) with our own preconceived notions. In professional/scientific literature (one of my playgrounds) we call this reader bias. Broadly speaking, it describes our tendency to read what we are reading through the filter of our own accepted truths. As a result we often find ourselves disagreeing (or agreeing) with what another has written because we have already decided what is right/wrong in our own minds.
But there is another side to this. It is something called authorial intent. This is somewhat less applicable in scientific literature than it is in the world of philosophy or humanities studies. Broadly speaking, it refers to the intent of the author when he/she communicates. If we accept that the author wrote (or created) with
intent then that should constrain our interpretation of what has been written or created. It establishes a hermeneutic.
In the area of ship modeling we might say that if the modeler intended to create to an
'historical' standard then that person's work should be interpreted (judged, or perhaps it would be better to say
appreciated) against that intent. If the modeler intended to create to another standard then that work should be appreciated against that intended standard. But that also means we should not interpret (judge) another's work against an intent (standard) they never intended. I believe we can discern authorial intent by 'reading the room.' For example, it would be hard to review my work and not discern that my intent is to build to a mostly historical standard. There are other build logs here that the intent of the builder is to create something fanciful - in that case to interpret or judge their work with regard to historicity is to fail to appreciate authorial intent.
The part that I found appealing from Mr. Korent's post is the notion of craftsmanship. Assuming the builder intended to do their best possible work (perhaps that's unfair?) then craftsmanship should be evident. Of course there is a learning curve even to that. Or there might be constraints imposed by knowledge, materials, tools, natural ability, etc. But we can all appreciate craftmanship regardless of the intent of the author/creator/modeler.
I believe this is the distinction Jimsky intends for us to recognize when he introduced this topic - but if otherwise I'm sure he will correct me

. After all, he's the author...