value_judgement
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision | |||
value_judgement [2025/08/14 11:14] – ultracomfy | value_judgement [2025/08/28 20:45] (current) – ultracomfy | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
</ | </ | ||
- | A value judgement is essentially | + | A value judgement is an opinion |
- | + | ||
- | For example, personal preference | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Here, that same statement | + | |
- | \\ | + | |
====== Value Judgements in modern Philosophy ====== | ====== Value Judgements in modern Philosophy ====== | ||
- | Now, in real philosophy, value judgements are discrete, finite evaluations of things under an ethical system. It is about the ability of ethical systems to categorize things as //good// or //bad//, and these ethical systems can be used to judge the ethical **value** of //all// things. Example, my ethical system dictates that gay sex is a good thing. My ethical system is based on human pleasure, sex between two gay people has a net positive effect on them and society as a whole, therefore it is //good//.\\ | + | In real philosophy, value judgements are discrete, finite evaluations of things under an ethical system. It is about the ability of ethical systems to categorize things as //good// or //bad//, and these ethical systems can be used to judge the ethical **value** of //all// things. Example, my ethical system dictates that gay sex is a good thing. My ethical system is based on human pleasure, sex between two gay people has a net positive effect on them and society as a whole, therefore it is //good//.\\ |
Well, not quite, actually. To be nitpicky, [[Utilitarianism]] doesn' | Well, not quite, actually. To be nitpicky, [[Utilitarianism]] doesn' | ||
\\ | \\ |
value_judgement.txt · Last modified: 2025/08/28 20:45 by ultracomfy