A fuller explication of this proposed axiology would have been useful. From LearnThat.org. [yourdictionary.com]
Secondly, the concept of interdisciplinarity implies a neutral axiology. From Wordnik.com. [A Problem Word] Reference
The branch of ethics concerned with intrinsic value is known as axiology. From Wordnik.com. [Desert] Reference
As before, however, Hartshorne's axiology is ultimately theocentric in character. From Wordnik.com. [Charles Hartshorne] Reference
In axiology as well as in metaphysics/theodicy, freedom is crucial, on Hartshorne's view. From Wordnik.com. [Charles Hartshorne] Reference
The reticulated model is represented by Laudan as a triad consisting of theory, methodology, and axiology. From Wordnik.com. [Laudan, demarcation and the vacuity of Intelligent design - The Panda's Thumb] Reference
I think that differences in ontology, methodology and/or axiology cause a great deal of confusion in these discussions. From Wordnik.com. [A long, boring post on everybody's favorite topic] Reference
Traditional axiology seeks to investigate what things are good, how good they are, and how their goodness is related to one another. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
A helpful assumption often made in axiology is that intrinsic value is had not just by anything at all, but rather by states of affairs or propositions. From Wordnik.com. [Desert] Reference
For instance, a traditional question of axiology concerns whether the objects of value are subjective psychological states, or objective states of the world. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
So, I drew up a little ontology of sets of human agents: (phil sense, not compu) 1. denialists = with UNscientific axiology, whether w/or w/o (clim.) sci degrees. From Wordnik.com. [Social epistemology and climate denialism | Serendipity] Reference
Whatever we take the “primary bearers” of value to be, one of the central questions of traditional axiology is that of what stuffs are good: what is of value. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
The theory of value, so construed, encompasses axiology, but also includes many other questions about the nature of value and its relation to other moral categories. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
Second it effectively makes a distinction between the realms of axiology (concerned with the good, the valuable) and deontology (concerned with duty and obligation). From Wordnik.com. [Moral Arguments for the Existence of God] Reference
Until then, we'll continue to see participants in various paradigms demanding that other participants work from within the same ontology, methodology and/or axiology. From Wordnik.com. [A long, boring post on everybody's favorite topic] Reference
To sum: there are a few critiques of the study… first is axiology- the value of the information or, who is providing the information and what do they have to benefit. From Wordnik.com. [Bad News for Herbal Medicine? - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com] Reference
These include: anti-scepticism, anti-naturalism in humanities and axiology, realism in epistemology and philosophy of science, absolutism in epistemology and axiology, and empiricism. From Wordnik.com. [Lvov-Warsaw School] Reference
Sentences like 1, in which “good” is predicated of a mass term, constitute a central part of traditional axiology, in which philosophers have wanted to know what things (of which there can be more or less) are good. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
So there is no in-principle problem for consequentialism posed by this sort of example; whether it is an issue for a given consequentialist depends on her axiology: on what she thinks is intrinsically bad, and how bad she thinks it is. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
To varying degrees of course - bioethics will make more use of it than say axiology. From Wordnik.com. [Thinkers' Podium] Reference
But I will note that Stefan doesn't actually provide a rigorous axiology in his book. From Wordnik.com. [Libertarian Blog Place] Reference
So hence my confusion about Stefan's invocation of the scientific method as the sole hint to his axiology. From Wordnik.com. [Libertarian Blog Place] Reference
Rather, they only exist, and are thus only specifiable, relative to a particular value-system, or axiology. From Wordnik.com. [Ethical Technology] Reference
Writing a class discussion response about axiology from Guba and Lincoln's Chapter 8 in The Sage Handbook of Qualitative Research (3rd). From Wordnik.com. [Silence and Voice] Reference
These three questions are the meat, respectively, of ontology, epistemology, and axiology, which are the three "queens" of rational thought in every civilization. From Wordnik.com. Reference
Meanwhile, it turns out that in practice there is a subset of us who aren't so good at deception, and it's not a matter of axiology: it's a matter of brain structure. From Wordnik.com. [small dead animals] Reference
Leaving behind the current paradigm means creating a new myth that replaces both Christianity and "secular Christianity," as I would call the current axiology that permeates the West. From Wordnik.com. [Gates of Vienna] Reference
What I do want to point out is that you've now moved into the realm of axiology (that is, the study of value, or more specifically for our purposes, the study of what kinds of things have moral weight and why). From Wordnik.com. [Libertarian Blog Place] Reference
N. - (pl. - las, - lae,) armpit; shoulder. axillary a. of arm-pit; of or growing in an axil. axiology. From Wordnik.com. [xml's Blinklist.com] Reference
Ontology harbors axiology – is implies an ought. From Wordnik.com. [enowning] Reference
1. denialists = with UNscientific axiology, whether w/or w/o (clim.) sci degrees. From Wordnik.com. [Social epistemology and climate denialism | Serendipity] Reference
(“axiology”) to those of ethics (“deontology”). From Wordnik.com. [Roderick Chisholm] Reference
“axiology”. From Wordnik.com. [Value Theory] Reference
The book's subtitle promises "8500 Words Not Yet in Standard Dictionaries," but the claim is somewhat inflated considering the presence in the book of axiology, charisma, disposable, dissonance, dyslexia, ethnic, face (as a verb), guru, hit (to mean ` a theatrical success ') ionosphere, karate, maternity (as an adjective), mole (in chemistry), Nematoda (in biology), ontology and welfare state, to name but a few. From Wordnik.com. [VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol IX No 2] Reference
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