Writer's Note: "A Glossary of Values" was begun several years ago, circa 2002-2003, and this version was completed in October 2008, today.
A GLOSSARY OF VALUES
Art – work created and crafted for aesthetic pleasure; work of beauty, depth, energy, insight, intelligence, relevance, and truth
Beauty – fineness of form; an attractive, suggestive wholeness, having physical and spiritual appeal; affectingly sensuous
Civility – a sensitive or intelligent regard for others that shapes manners and relationships; the desire and habit of avoiding injury to others; and avoidance of vulgarity and cruelty
Common Sense – assumptions based on experience; intuition; ordinary logic
Compromise – resolution of conflict or disagreement; settling for less than one’s original intention or goal in order to maintain cordiality, peace, or another important aspect of a relationship
Context – the preceding and/or surrounding history, ideas, and relationships; environment
Contradictions – conflicting ideas and feelings; the discordance between ideas and reality
Democracy - civic participation; sharing of responsibility in government, in public representation and activity
Economics – wealth generation and distribution; financial relations in a society; the system—the laws, rules, practices, and beliefs—involving money in a community, city, state, or nation
Evidence – observed fact; books and documents; trial and testing; expert testimony
Fairness – balanced or objective treatment; justice; a valuation rooted in established criteria
Form – structure; organization
Generosity – the act of giving out of choice, instinct, bounty, uncompelled giving; an open way of being, and a special sympathy of insight
Honesty – adhering to facts, intention; candor, clarity, directness; truth
Imagination – creativity, dream, invention; an ability to give vision to what does not yet exist or to see the connections between what does exist
Innovation – new forms of thought or product; experiment; changes in received orders
Intelligence – thinking ability; criticality; the capacity to weigh experience, analysis, observation, intuition, and other sources of information
Integrity – being true to the best, deepest, highest aspects of one’s character, discipline, philosophy, and character; dependable, recognizable quality;
Intellectual Rigor – thorough criticality of both details and overall structure and content
Intergenerational – the relationship between differing age groups; the potential of recognizing or responding to ideas, events, facts regardless of age
Justice - fundamental fairness, in interpretation and treatment, and regarding rewards and punishments
Knowledge - fact, truth, propositions for which there is proof; a body of evidence and insight; a tradition of knowing, speaking, and writing.
Lyricism – musicality of language; elegant and poetic diction
Multicultural – the presence of cultural diversity; an appreciation of artistic and philosophical traditions from different nations
Nuance - complexity, difference, subtlety; variety of experience, perception, and texture
Observation - what can be known through the senses and/or by study
Passion – a great intensity of feeling inspired by an idea, object, or person; an obsessive regard
Pleasure – the act or feeling of being pleased; elation, enjoyment, entertainment; a rise in spirit, a lightness of being
Power – authority, convention, and force; forms of power often work to undermine, deceive, stereotype, embarrass, intimidate, misinform, smash—as power often does whatever it takes to maintain itself
Quality - character, integrity, wholeness
Resources – useful character(s), ideas, artifacts, books, information, and tools; material that can enable one to make desired gains
Security – a belief in or sense of well-being, of necessary resources; the satisfaction of survival needs; ability or facility for self-defense and self-preservation
Sensuality – appeal to the senses; the facility to have or to provoke pleasant physical sensations
Spirituality – of the spirit; perception of life beyond surfaces; an abstract apprehension of the connection between living things
Subcultures – the shared habits, relationships, rituals, and values among people who aren’t dominant in a civilization or society; minority, rather than majority, culture; and often subcultural energies and forms reinvigorate the dominant culture
Technique – ability to do what is required by a given art or discipline
Tradition – the inherited culture, logic, and philosophy of an art or nation; the ongoing discourse within a discipline, with its own particular grammar and vocabulary and object or objects of concern
Understanding - comprehension; clear, right, judgment
Virtue - evidence or nature of being fine, good, right
Wackiness - eccentricity; an appreciation for, or inclination to, absurdity or wild imagination
Xenial - hospitality
Youth - early life; the spirit of possibility
Zest - energy, enjoyment, pleasure