Beneath the Surface of Well-Being
Following Thomas Hawk's February Hartman Happy Hour, a rich discussion unfolded. One of the standout contributions came from Edward Korbal, who offered a beautiful axiological lens on the concept of well-being. He framed it through Hartman’s hierarchy: Systemic = well-thinking, Extrinsic = well-doing, and Intrinsic = well-being.
How To Put Your Life In Order Through Self Esteem
From time to time, some of us may go through moments in which important and difficult decisions must be made. These are moments in which the road you are following in life seems to end, like a dead end, or presents obstacles that seem to grow with each new day.
In Loving Memory of Rem B. Edwards
Rem was known as an embodiment of intellect and heart. He was a founding member of this Institute and also served as the founding editor of the Journal of Formal Axiology. To the Institute’s members, Rem was a friend, mentor, and scholar.
Harman Institute Elects New Board Members (2023)
The institute is pleased to announce its newly elected Board of Directors who will continue to steward the institute's mission and strategies to role-model a community that cooperates for changing the world for the better by developing, applying, and making famous Formal Axiology and Hartman's legacy.
Where were you born?
Edward Korbal, co-president of the RSHI Board, shares a series of prompting questions on birthplace inspired by a recent board meeting discussion and Chapter 1 of Freedom to Live. These provocative questions could serve as journal prompting or rich discussion.
Recap of the 2023 Archives Trip
Armed with the knowledge and established process from the 2022 trip, the Institute’s VP of Marketing, Catherine Foster, and her husband completed a second trip and digitized 9,078 pages of hand-written notes, letters, documents, and other papers.
“I Was Born To Die”
Edward Korbal, co-president of the RSHI Board, shares his thoughts on the four questions posed by Dr. Hartman in Chapter 1 of Freedom to Live. These provocative questions are a launch point for generating intrinsic, extrinsic, and systemic value in the world.
Focusing on the Self View (Part 2) Side of the HVP
Clifford G. Hurst, PhD shares a commentary regarding board member and axiologist, Sophie Coulthard's, lecture for the 2022 46th Annual Robert S. Hartman Institute Conference. He shares insight into the value of using Rho Scores and shares wisdom from the Dalai Lama regarding focus on the external world.
Defining "Formal Axiology"
Formal axiology focuses initially upon the most formal features of human values, then upon applications of these formalities to the concrete details of what we value (values) and how we value (valuations). Robert S. Hartman searched for and began to find the most logically abstract (he would say “synthetic”) features of all human values and valuations.
Hartman and Schumacher Small is Beautiful
Clifford G. Hurst, PhD reveals connections between Robert S. Hartman and economist, E.F. Schumacher, through Hartman's not-yet-published manuscript, Partnership of Capital and Labor. In this blog post, Cliff shares Hartman's three stages in the evolution of capitalism and how they relate to the “S” to “E” to “I” valuations of work.
Conference 2019 Opening Talk: Let's Change the World
In the opening remarks at the 43rd Annual RSHI Conference, Cliff shared that we can indeed change the world by refining, expanding and making known all of Hartman's rich thoughts regarding the importance of human values.
Reflections about the Situation We Are In
Clifford G. Hurst, PhD reflects on the current global situation with COVID-19 declared a pandemic and brings Robert S. Hartman's words to life from unpublished manuscript "A Revolution Against War."