And value is simply a comparison in my mind. — ISeeIDoIAm
what goal are you trying to achieve? — ISeeIDoIAm
What outcome? — ISeeIDoIAm
If knowledge determines truth, how is value determined?
It seems to me that when we value something that one might automatically assume it is a good. In one of my other two threads I talked about the dangers of superfluous valuation of happiness. In yet another thread, I talked about how can one go about discounting what one already values to make room for coinciding wants that are separate from needs.
I take it upon myself to try and answer my own question. So, my take is that in general rational egotism might seem like the automatic choice here; but, hedonism does not precede the determination of worth.
Would anyone care to expand on this thesis, whether you agree with it or not? — Shawn
I've been waiting to, in fact am dying to, know what non-hedonistic values would look like? — TheMadFool
What could be so valuable that happiness doesn't matter? Whatever it is, the fact that happiness is the challenge it must overcome is eye-opening no? — TheMadFool
"What could be so valuable that happiness doesn't matter?"
Abstaining from eating all of my food today so as to not starve later. Aka: rationing.
That is not to say people don't hold self destructive behaviors, but we don't talk about them anymore, they didn't make it. (waka waka) — ISeeIDoIAm
From an old thread discussion, I speculate ...If knowledge determines truth, how is value determined? — Shawn
To live is to evaluate.
In Spinoza's terms, every life seeks to persist in its existence - continue, survive, grow-develop (à la 'will to power'); thus, every life values - is valuable to - herself; and insofar as a life recognizes other lives as valuable to themselves, a life enters into reciprocal valuing with and among them, to value and be valued by other lives. Thus, value, or meaning, does not come "out of nothing"; it comes from community - natality, eusociality, fatality - and reinforced, or enriched, by communicative practices (e.g. cooperative labors, crafts-arts, rituals, trade, discursive dialectics (e.g. scientific / historical / philosophical inquiries)). — 180 Proof
You act as if happiness is something that's static. — ISeeIDoIAm
To live is to evaluate.
In Spinoza's terms, every life seeks to persist in its existence - continue, survive, grow-develop (à la 'will to power'); thus, every life values - is valuable to - herself; and insofar a life recognizes other lives as valuable to themselves, a life enters into reciprocal valuing with and among them, to value and be valued by other lives. Thus, value, or meaning, does not come "out of nothing"; it comes from community - natality, sociality, fatality - and reinforced, or enriched, by communicative practices (e.g. cooperative labors, crafts-arts, rituals, trade, discursive dialectics (e.g. scientific / historical / philosophical inquiries)). — 180 Proof
it seems to accurately characterise a healthy attitude to one's own existence: to seek to continue it and develop it, to increase the things one is able to do with oneself, increase one's functional efficacy; — bert1
From "other's" what?Has the thought occurred that you ask too much from other's? — ISeeIDoIAm
I didn't want to mention that as 180 and I disagree sharply on that, and I was enjoying being able to agree with him on something. — bert1
"Relations determine value."
Care to elaborate? I read that as: things can't have value without a comparison. — ISeeIDoIAm
And this innocent qualification seems at the same time both the strength and Achilles's weakness of the argument. What you've written, it seem to me, must be read very carefully. And finally calling for a decision to be made as to what it means and how. 180 proof seems about right - why is that not a surprise?!and insofar a life recognizes — 180 Proof
Look, as sentient meat, however illusory our identities are, we craft those identities by making value judgments: everybody judges, all the time. Now, you got a problem with that... You're livin' wrong. — Rust
thus, every life values - is valuable to - herself; and insofar as a life recognizes other lives as valuable to themselves, a life enters into reciprocal valuing with and among them, to value and be valued by other lives. — 180 Proof
If knowledge determines truth, how is value determined?
It seems to me that when we value something that one might automatically assume it is a good. In one of my other two threads I talked about the dangers of superfluous valuation of happiness. In yet another thread, I talked about how can one go about discounting what one already values to make room for coinciding wants that are separate from needs.
I take it upon myself to try and answer my own question. So, my take is that in general rational egotism might seem like the automatic choice here; but, hedonism does not precede the determination of worth.
Would anyone care to expand on this thesis, whether you agree with it or not? — Shawn
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