Sunday, September 7, 2014

The Fact-Value Distinction

I spent part of today improving on an article on the fact-value distinction. Philosopher Martin Cohen essentially wanted to see my original writing "bullet-proofed" against possible objections. Whether I succeeded yet, I don't know. OBSERVATION: Typically, the fact-value distinction is viewed as a narrow philosophical problem. But it is not. It affects all of society. For instance: Our universities are carved up into the natural sciences (fact) and human sciences (value). Our experience is divided between "You are just a number" (fact) and the desire for the personal touch (value). The language we speak is separated between "strictly normed" words and everyday speech suffused with connotation and inference. And so on. But all this causes some big problems. The article seeks to get to the bottom of it all.
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NOTE: The article (in a "mature draft" at present) is at Solving the Fact-Value Dichotomy.

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