Volume 11, Journal of Formal Axiology (2018)

$25.00

In this volume:

  • Samples of Hartman’s previously unpublished work: Lectures IV and V from a series lectures Hartman delivered about his work,

  • Learn the backstory of Hartman’s time spent at MIT as Historian Peter Kizilos-Clift shares about Hartman’s role in helping MIT  confront, in the nuclear age, an assumption widely held among many scientists that science is—and should be—value neutral.

  • See how machine learning can better analyze degrees of extrinsic value than Hartman was able to do using Pascal’s Triangle, shared by former Hartman doctoral student Mark A. Moore and co-author Hong Zhang,

  • Follow along as frequent contributor Gilberto Hernández Carrasco continues his discussion (from previous issues 2011 and 2014) about applications of formal axiology to human development. In this article, Gilberto proposes a quality model for the management of the Evangelical Christian Church using formal axiology

In this volume:

  • Samples of Hartman’s previously unpublished work: Lectures IV and V from a series lectures Hartman delivered about his work,

  • Learn the backstory of Hartman’s time spent at MIT as Historian Peter Kizilos-Clift shares about Hartman’s role in helping MIT  confront, in the nuclear age, an assumption widely held among many scientists that science is—and should be—value neutral.

  • See how machine learning can better analyze degrees of extrinsic value than Hartman was able to do using Pascal’s Triangle, shared by former Hartman doctoral student Mark A. Moore and co-author Hong Zhang,

  • Follow along as frequent contributor Gilberto Hernández Carrasco continues his discussion (from previous issues 2011 and 2014) about applications of formal axiology to human development. In this article, Gilberto proposes a quality model for the management of the Evangelical Christian Church using formal axiology