In its broadest sense, “value theory” is a catch-all label used to encompass all branches of moral philosophy, social and political philosophy, aesthetics, and sometimes feminist philosophy and the philosophy of religion — whatever areas of philosophy are deemed to encompass some “evaluative” aspect.
Judging by your declared values I would guess that you’re politically liberal or perhaps independent. It’s not too clear as listed. Definitely not libertarian. — praxis
You missed something here. You left out philosophical approaches that attack the whole enterprise of ferreting out a particular value system and privileging it over others. — Joshs
So what are our values? — T Clark
I'm particularly averse towards nationalism. — Wallows
What about things that people sure seem to "value", but are less likely to admit?
aesthetics (vanity, judging appearances, etc)
popularity (being cool - what IS cool may vary, but few people seem capable of escaping the desire of being admired - I occasionally like to think I have, but I am probably just conditioned to being chronically un-cool :nerd:)
power (superiority)
Are these "values" in the same way as the one you have listed? — ZhouBoTong
What other more conservative values are there? Social stability? Security, Honor? Emphasis on tradition? Patriotism? Religious devotion? I'm trying to be fair, but I'm probably not the one to fill in this list. — T Clark
obedient ... reverent ... capitalism — T Clark
obscures the extent to which human value directs our thoughts, feelings, and decisions. — T Clark
I value:
Awareness, interconnection and love (as actualising potentiality)
Integrity, self control and patience
Kindness, generosity and kindness
Peace, joy and hope — Possibility
Values don't just appear, we know that for sure. Drilling them into children's head gives them the form ("I can not tell a lie", "I will not abuse the cat" ...) but it doesn't give them any motivation to be truthful, or to be nice to the cat.
It seems to me that the key to teaching children good values is first establishing loving relationships in the family. (No love? Just forget the rest of this.). The loving relationship between the parents and between parent and child is where the motivation comes from to please the parent by emulating their behavior. We don't teach children values (initially, anyway) by drilling theory into their heads. Children acquire the parents' values by emulation, then thinking, then by making decisions.
Later on, we add formality to the values instruction, building on the bonds of affection that motivate the wish to be good in the way the parent desires. We tell the child to be honest, play fair, and don't cheat. We tell them to follow the law. No stealing. Be loyal to your country; respect the police, congressmen and women, the Supreme Court, and the President (even if you have to hold your nose and keep a barf bag handy). — Bitter Crank
What I'd like discuss is specific values held by the people of the forum. I'm trying to put together a list of what I think my central personal values are. — T Clark
Here’s a list of the values of Western Culture from the web:
Democracy.
Rational thinking.
Individualism.
Christianity.
Capitalism.
Modern technology.
Human rights.
Scientific thinking. — T Clark
Just to take the above list of Western values, how is 'rational thinking', 'scientific thinking' and 'modern technology' a trait of only the West? — ssu
It goes to that.Do they necessarily mean that those are uniquely western values? — Terrapin Station
I don't think I left it out. I don't think it comes under the heading of "What are our values?" As I indicated in the OP, broader issues of the place values hold in our philosophies and our lives are not the intended subject of this thread. I'm hoping to talk about them later. — T Clark
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