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To judge J, at time t, something is valuable if its properties are perceived as matching the property-names that comprise the meaning of the thing-being-evaluated.
brevel_monkey wrote:To judge J, at time t, something is valuable if its properties are perceived as matching the property-names that comprise the meaning of the thing-being-evaluated.
What are the property-names that comprise the meaning of a dog? Is this supposed to be on objective or a subjective standard?
James S Saint wrote:I'm afraid that I would have to disagree with Katz.
Value is based fundamentally upon anticipated affect. The named properties might or might not be involved in an evaluation of that affect.
It seems kind of silly to think that perhaps a dog would taste something as bad only because of the names given to its properties.
The dictionary is objective about subjective states of a person; in the same way a physician can objectively write in a report that the patient had a pain in his abdomen. The pain was subjective. ...but very real (to the patient.)
thinkdr wrote:James S Saint wrote:I'm afraid that I would have to disagree with Katz.
Value is based fundamentally upon anticipated affect. The named properties might or might not be involved in an evaluation of that affect.
It seems kind of silly to think that perhaps a dog would taste something as bad only because of the names given to its properties.
If you admit that "the named properties might be involved" as you do, then you are not disagreeing with Katz.
Let's grant, for the sake of argument, that the dog, being a conscious mammal, has a language that it speaks, and that you speak it also. Did the dog tell you that what it tasted was "bad." Did the dog actually say "bad" in dog-tongue to you?? Or are you anthropomorphizing, reading into the dog's behavior what you judge as "bad"? Can you definitely say for sure that the dog made a value judgment - in dog terms? In that case it is incumbent upon you to spell out the dog's thinking processes, and the neurology behind it.
What is your definition of (or scientific analysis)as to) how the dog "anticipates"?
James S Saint wrote:thikdr wrote: If you admit that "the named properties might be involved" as you do, then you are not disagreeing with Katz.
... Did the dog actually say "bad" in dog-tongue to you?? Or are you anthropomorphizing, reading into the dog's behavior what you judge as "bad"? ...
What is your definition of (or scientific analysis)as to) how the dog "anticipates"?
The dog's behavior... reveals the dog's preferences and the dog's anticipation of value. There need not be any names of anything nor language involved at all, merely memory of experiences and affects.
brevel_monkey wrote:The dictionary is objective about subjective states of a person; in the same way a physician can objectively write in a report that the patient had a pain in his abdomen. The pain was subjective. ...but very real (to the patient.)
Yes, thank you. I know what a dictionary is. I also could have looked up the word 'dog' in one myself.
OK. Lets say I believe that cats are largely useless, needy animals that shit in other people's lawns and do the world very little good. So the attributes I attach to a cat are 'lazy', 'disobedient', 'vicious', 'disloyal' and 'has a tendency to shit on other people's lawns'. Anyway, lets say that we have two cats. One cat is the epitome of all these things, however the other cat ... is fiercely loyal to its owner, knows a few cool tricks like fetching the paper and has the added bonus as acting as a guard cat.....
It seems like, by your standards, the first cat would have to be the more valuable because 'its properties are perceived as matching the property-names that comprise the meaning of the thing-being-evaluated'. ...
So basically, I can't see the necessary correlation ...
thinkdr wrote:This is the animal version of Charles L. Stevenson's emotivism, and/or of a Positivism (such as Carnap's) applied to values. Behavior reveals a lot to a behavioral psychologist, but this thread is about Ethics. Let's not have a reductionism to psychology to explain the moral life. For it doesn't work....
thinkdr wrote:{First, I'll phrase it in some technical language, but then I'll simplify later on.}
To judge J, at time t, something is valuable if its properties are perceived as matching the property-names that comprise the meaning of the thing-being-evaluated.
thinkdr wrote:We learn meanings associated with specific words or concepts when we first learn the language, our native tongue.
thinkdr wrote:To put it in plain simple everyday language, when the actual matches the ideal, there is value. [ The actual never has to touch the ideal, just correspond to it, in the mind of the valuer. Value is a matter of degree: to the extent x matches the picture you have for x’s in your mind, you will tend to call it: a good x. ]
thinkdr wrote:When the Axiom of Value (the formal definition of "value" offered) is applied, one of the fields we get as a result is Ethics, so I wasn't off the track. The whole reason I brought up the study of what "value" means in the system is because of its relevance to Ethics ...which is what I'm really interested in, and which is what the world needs urgently now. There is such confusion about (moral) values prevailing that people do some pretty dumb things, I believe you would agree.
thinkdr wrote:Of course I know that people don't stop and count properties, or check descriptions !! I am not that naive. Give me a little credit.... But when you speak of "whether the item has value or importance to the assessor" you are going in circles, since importance is one type of value. You can't use that to define "value" As G. E. Moore pointed out: When you define value as importance, it's like saying "Value is value" -- which is a tautology.
For an actual cat - a living, conscious individual, is an Intrinsic Value
But when you speak of "whether the item has value or importance to the assessor" you are going in circles, since importance is one type of value. You can't use that to define "value" As G. E. Moore pointed out: When you define value as importance, it's like saying "Value is value" -- which is a tautology..
When a formal frame of reference is applied (via bridge laws of interpretation) to a set of unordered data it is useful if it orders and explicates the data. You could charge Einstein for employing the Tensor Calculus (a matrix of matrices) to speak about Relativity, when it seems to have nothing to do with it. Yet he found it to be a useful tool, whose later deductions revealed something about the nature of the universe. In the same way, no matter how counter-intuitive at first, the structure of value, as explained in the Axiom, seems to you, it will be very helpful later in ordering and explaining the data of Ethics; it will reveal a lot about human nature - which, after all, is a part of nature too.
brevel_monkey wrote:For an actual cat - a living, conscious individual, is an Intrinsic Value
Why is it 'an Intrinsic Value'. I can hardly see how you got to this conclusion following your own definition of value.
brevel_monkey wrote:...James lumped 'value' and importance together and effectively equated them. He did not at any stage suggest one be defined as the other. ...
brevel_monkey wrote:For an actual cat - a living, conscious individual, is an Intrinsic Value
Why is it 'an Intrinsic Value'. I can hardly see how you got to this conclusion following your own definition of value.
brevel_monkey wrote:...James lumped 'value' and importance together and effectively equated them. He did not at any stage suggest one be defined as the other. ...
You're right, brevel monkey, it doesn't follow from that definition. What I meant to say is that a cat (as well as anything else) can be Intrinsically valued, and that with my cat, Jessie, I did Intrinsically value her (much of the time.)
In response, I refer all readers to the words of the inventor/discoverer of value science, himself, Dr. Robert S. Hartman.
brevel_monkey wrote:So you judged her as valuable, but not because you judged that her properties were perceived as matching the property-names that comprised the meaning of the her.
So in a way, aren't you contradicting yourself a little here? Or is this supposed to be a prescriptive, rather than a descriptive, definition of value? science, himself, .
James S Saint wrote:Can you justify why the definition of "value" should relate to the matching to a description?
..btw, I once had a similar cat.
Drusus wrote:Dependant on situation:
- usefulness.
- practicallity.
- efficientcy.
- cost.
- (sometimes) doesn't take too much intelligence to use.
A wife would not be a thing when the question was "anything"thinkdr wrote:So, say you have a wife, and sadly your wife falls sick.and is confined to total bed-rest. ... She ceases to be efficient, useful, practical. Your wife in this situation is none of those qualities on your above list, hence you won't value her any more?
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Thus you will not love her ...in that situation![]()
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Does the cost-factor bring money into your evaluation? Does someone who uses that list above to decide on what is valuable sell his girlfriends? or does he buy them? ....Just asking.....
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