I like this analogy: "You look at the color blue and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world.. you can sense beauty, goodness, truth, purpose, and other values, and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world, not just a knot of arbitrary socio-biological emotional-intellectual rors…
I like this analogy: "You look at the color blue and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world.. you can sense beauty, goodness, truth, purpose, and other values, and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world, not just a knot of arbitrary socio-biological emotional-intellectual rorschach blots." ...That view which claims that values are merely social constructions is most frequently associated with postmodernism. (I had just watched a video describing this striking contrast between the 'valueception' of process philosophers, and the 'value nihilism' of postmodernism.) https://youtu.be/dkKSNRNmnng
I like this analogy: "You look at the color blue and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world.. you can sense beauty, goodness, truth, purpose, and other values, and feel confident that you are perceiving some real quality of the world, not just a knot of arbitrary socio-biological emotional-intellectual rorschach blots." ...That view which claims that values are merely social constructions is most frequently associated with postmodernism. (I had just watched a video describing this striking contrast between the 'valueception' of process philosophers, and the 'value nihilism' of postmodernism.) https://youtu.be/dkKSNRNmnng