Moral value: Difference between revisions

415 bytes added ,  6 March 2004
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When someone uses a phrase like '''family values''' they are probably referring to a certain set of moral values they learned in their own [[family]], and not to anything objective or necessarily applicable to anyone else's family, for instance.
When someone uses a phrase like '''family values''' they are probably referring to a certain set of moral values they learned in their own [[family]], and not to anything objective or necessarily applicable to anyone else's family, for instance.
Even just using a phrase like [[moral purchasing]] assumes that some moral value can be agreed on by some group, that can be expressed by some system that group uses.  ''See [[institutional buying criteria]] for the most concrete idea of this.''
Believing that moral value always equals [[price value]] is an ideology that is usually associated with [[w:globalization]] or some types of [[w:libertarianism]].
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