Difference between revisions of "Valuescience Other Resources"

From Valuescience
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 16: Line 16:
 
*Wikipedia. "Fundamental Human Needs." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_human_needs
 
*Wikipedia. "Fundamental Human Needs." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_human_needs
 
Max Neff built on Maslow's work to create a more detailed list of universal human needs. He emphasized that these needs were few and finite in contrast to conventional economists who view them as infinite.
 
Max Neff built on Maslow's work to create a more detailed list of universal human needs. He emphasized that these needs were few and finite in contrast to conventional economists who view them as infinite.
*[[Valuescience Study Guide]]
 

Revision as of 09:20, 30 March 2017

Core Readings

  • Schrom, David. "Evolving Science, Evolving Value." Link 1 page.

Schrom makes a succinct argument for valuescience. Please read to become able to recreate this argument.

  • Schrom, David. (2008). Valuescience Booklet. [1] 24 pp.

Schrom outlines a basic valuescience argument and briefly touches upon applications to selected fields.

  • Wikipedia. (2009). "Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs." Link 8 pp.

Maslow proposes a schema, widely referenced for more than half a century, characterizing what he discovered to be universal human wants.

Interest Readings

  • Walker, Marshall. (1963). "A Survival Technique." Nature of Scientific Thought. pp.14-20. Link

Walker demystifies science and shows both its ubiquity and its import.

  • Graham, Paul. (2007). "How to Do Philosophy." Link

Y-combinator technology venture incubator founder Graham offers advice and encouragement to budding valuescientists and roots it in his own experience majoring in philosophy for most of his college career.

  • Harris, Sam. (2007). "We Are Making Moral Progress." Link

Harris, a vehement advocate for a scientific approach to morality, makes his case that others are adopting valuescience to good effect.

Max Neff built on Maslow's work to create a more detailed list of universal human needs. He emphasized that these needs were few and finite in contrast to conventional economists who view them as infinite.