Wolfgang Kohler
The Place of Value in a World of Facts
Can values operate in a world of facts and still be more than indifferent facts
themselves?
In this important and challenging book, Wolfgang Kohler's subject is value, or what he calls the
"requiredness" of an object or activity. Starting with a descriptive account of values as
we become aware of them, he finds that, inside certain contexts, parts of such
structures do not appear as indifferent facts. They are experienced as belonging
there intrinsically or, also, as being out of place in their contexts.
Kohler's closely reasoned analysis, drawing on the fields of psychology, biology,
and physics, centers around this concept of requiredness. Certain things in nature belong
together or require the presence of one another in such a way that fitness or
requiredness constitutes a principle of association between them. This same principle
of association, Kohler suggests, may help to explain the idea of value and lay a
foundation for the scientific solution of ethical problems.
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