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Randall B. Bush analyzes the ways unacknowledged axiological
assumptions (e.g., about what is important, why human beings are
valuing creatures, and where the capacity to value comes from)
prejudice the perspectives and approaches of various academic
disciplines, especially in the social sciences and the humanities.
The disciplines of ethics and aesthetics provide the most useful
tools for a philosophy of value, but academic overspecialization
has compartmentalized and segregated these disciplines from others,
threatening to unravel the unity of conceptions of the moral and
the beautiful in human existence. Bush argues that a dialectical
approach to conflicts between ethics and aesthetics can point to a
broader, axiological vision--informed by a Trinitarian conception
of reality--in which the whole, a coherent theory of value, is more
than the sum of its parts.
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