What is good, though? — Outlander
Value as in, intrinsic quality but in a taxonomical sense, whether that quality is good or bad or neither. Something can have an extremely high value of "indistinctiveness" or ambiguity, rather, couldn't it? So, essentially traits and characteristics and their levels of is what "value" refers to here? — Outlander
Seems easy to get lost in semantics. — Outlander
According to Harry Frankfurter (the respectable late philosopher), the highest good seems to be 'love'. — Shawn
Well, I think the confusion can be mitigated about the quality of value by asserting that it exists in degrees of greatness, yes? So, if love is something we value, then I believe that it seems to exist in a category of its own. — Shawn
I don't think the disambiguation or delineating what is good and what is of value is entirely a semantic issue. Again, if you want to go in this direction I believe in the very subjectivity of 'value' is to be associated with relativism or postmodernism if that's how you want this discussion to delve into... — Shawn
But what is love in this sense? By most definitions it alludes to a feeling of admiration that transcends (is devoid of any and all or is otherwise operating outside of the realm of) logic. If this is true, how useful is such a quality in philosophy, really?Does it not make philosophical discourse into little more than a game of favorites based on transient states of favor not fixed in any deeper absolute truth or concrete value? — Outlander
Could there not be different types of a single value each with varying degrees, though? Take love, for example. There's platonic, romantic, and one other I believe. You could love someone as a brother but hate them as a friend, no? — Outlander
If you could replace 'value' with a single word, what would it be? Worth? (to whom?) Characteristic? (intrinsic and absolute or circumstantial based on social or environmental factors?) Something else? — Outlander
I enjoy your threads as they're often brief and to the point, allowing even those ignorant of common philosophical models and -isms such as myself room to jump in and postulate from a beginner's frame of mind comfortably in between other mentally-taxing tasks. Looks like I may have gotten a bit over eager on this one, however. — Outlander
What is of highest good can only be defined by how you or a group of people value it, no? — Shawn
The thesis statement of this thread is that axiology (the study of value) is the highest good. — Shawn
Not "What is of highest good?" -- I'm asking what would it count to be a "highest good" at all? — Moliere
doesn't the situation that you are framing require us to have a way of qualifying what is good by appreciating it? Hence, the presupposition, to me, seems like we have to be able to value what is good in comparison with other goods to be able to appreciate it as a "good." — Shawn
So I'm wondering if the first meaning of "value" is the same as the second? Is the study of value becoming able to value what is good? — Moliere
but usually people get by with goods just fine without studying axiology. — Moliere
but usually people get by with goods just fine without studying axiology — Moliere
Yes, and the further question asks whether the highest good is the highest good or the study of value (axiology). — Leontiskos
Even supposing that we have to enter into the study of value to determine the highest good, does it then follow that the study of value is the highest good? It seems to me like saying that the study of nutrition is the most nutritious thing.
I would say that one must study good (or value) in an abstract way, but that this abstraction or reification is not itself the highest good. It seems that it simply cannot be the highest good by the very fact that it is a means to an end. — Leontiskos
If "studying the highest good" is going into a monastic life in order to improve oneself and happens to include reading texts then I think I can understand the motivation for the assertion. — Moliere
Yeah, I agree. One can, by analogy, go to a nutritionist and follow their advice to be nutritious.
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The study of nutritious certainly helps us be nutritious, but eating the right foods and not the wrong ones is what makes one healthy. — Moliere
I don't know how much study is important at all to the good at a personal level, but I recognize its importance as a discipline. I think that's getting me hung up a bit -- are we meaning the study of value is the highest good for the academic type philosophy, or the medical type philosophy? — Moliere
Yes, well, what a impoverished world to value things only materialistically with a unit of exchange to do so, such as money. — Shawn
For the modern mind if one knows the highest good then they will necessarily choose it, and therefore axiology assumes a preeminent place. For the ancient mind to intellectually know the highest good does not mean that one will necessarily be capable of choosing it and adhering to it, and because of this axiology becomes more subsidiary. — Leontiskos
In that case the ability to desire well becomes a central end of education (in the broad sense). — Leontiskos
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