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At the general level, there is a difference between [[moral]] and natural goods. Moral goods are those that have to do with the conduct of persons, usually leading to praise or blame. [[Natural goods]], on the other hand, have to do with objects, not [[persons]]. For example, to say that "Mary is a morally good person" might involve a different sense of "good" than that in the sentence "A banana split is good."
 
At the general level, there is a difference between [[moral]] and natural goods. Moral goods are those that have to do with the conduct of persons, usually leading to praise or blame. [[Natural goods]], on the other hand, have to do with objects, not [[persons]]. For example, to say that "Mary is a morally good person" might involve a different sense of "good" than that in the sentence "A banana split is good."
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[[Ethics]] tend to be more interested in moral goods than natural goods, while [[economics]] tends to be more interested in the reverse. However, both moral and natural goods are equally interesting to goodness and '''value theory''', which is more general in scope.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_theory]
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[[Ethics]] tend to be more interested in moral goods than natural goods, while [[economics]] tends to be more interested in the reverse. However, both moral and natural goods are equally interesting to goodness and '''value theory''', which is more general in scope.[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_theory]
 
==Psychology==
 
==Psychology==
 
In [[psychology]], value theory refers to the study of the [[manner]] in which human beings develop, assert and believe in certain values, and act or fail to act on them.
 
In [[psychology]], value theory refers to the study of the [[manner]] in which human beings develop, assert and believe in certain values, and act or fail to act on them.

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