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  1. Axiological ethics can be understood as the application of axiology onto the study of ethics. It is concerned with questioning the moral grounds which we base ethical judgements on. This is done through questioning the values in which ethical principles are grounded on. Once there is recognition and understanding of the underlying values hidden ...

  2. Apr 7, 2015 · This introduction characterizes and positions value theory, or axiology, as a philosophical discipline. It identifies its central issues and explains how value theory overlaps partly with other areas of moral philosophy, such as metaethics and normative etics, and how it relates other areas of philosophy. The introduction also explains how ...

  3. AXIOLOGY - THEORY OF VALUES Axiology, which stems from two Greek words - axios or worth, and logos or reason, theory - is a relatively new discipline. "In the twentieth century the term axiology was apparently first applied by Paul Lapie (Logique de la Volonte, 1902) and E. von Hartmann (Grundriss der Axiology, 1908)."

  4. Axiology. Axiology is a branch of philosophy that studies judgements about the value [1]. The term axiology is derived from the Greek and means ‘value’ or ‘worth’. Axiology is engaged with assessment of the role of researcher’s own value on all stages of the research process. [2]. It is a relatively recent addition to the area of ...

  5. Axiology. Axiology is the study of values and value judgements (literally “rational discourse about values [axía]”). In philosophy this field is subdivided into ethics (the study of morality) and aesthetics (the study of beauty, taste and judgement). For the hard-nosed scientist the relevance of axiology might not be obvious.

  6. Axiology, according to its Greek etymology, means "theory of values." The term was introduced at the beginning of the twentieth century when it became a recognized part of philosophy. As a discipline distinct from science, axiology was sometimes even equated with the whole of philosophy, especially in Germany.

  7. Axiology (from Greek ἀξίᾱ ( axiā) translated as "value, worth"; and λόγος ( logos) translated as "science") is the philosophical study of value. The term was first used in the early twentieth century by Paul Lapie, in 1902, and E. von Hartmann, in 1908. Axiology is the philosophical study of goodness, or value, in the widest sense ...

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