Valorism was created to embody a new philosophical orientation promoting human values above demagogical mandates. Valorism outlines the ideological, social, and economic implications of a humanist philosophy which places the individual first in constructing a more humane society. Valorism takes on the stature of a broader ranging philosophical oreientation due to its central premise that the coherence of value structures and their interaction with extraneous factors are at the very genesis of social, political and economic development. This underlines how values are the basis of all civilizations and that Valorism can help us create a more civilized world. A world where nature is best expressed in human nature and where our natural hopes and aspirations are echoed and widely represented in our entire field of experience.







It can be established that Values Systems have their own original logics and a structuring influence leading to the formation of intellectual thought, emotional intelligence, situational posturing, political action as well as social and economic interactions. Civilizational paradigms are therefore tributary to Value Systems. These are intermeshed with a Civilization’s precepts and work in concert to establish the shared ideas which define our joint perception of reality, our visions of the world, which to a great extent then brings our material world into correspondence with this perception, validating its reality by its materialization in society.

Values are therefore the cornerstones of the world we live in, they define what we call reality by orienting our subjective individual perceptions as well as the intersubjective collective consciousness of our societal constructs. More simply explained, whatever really matters to us leads to choose what will actually make up the world we live in. We value something so we pursue it and bring it into presence, making it become very real. This happens because whatever matters to us is what we grant our attention to, and what we dedicate our energies to obtain, cultivate, produce or build. Then it becomes a formal part of our reality, the social and physical space we share with others. When we grant values power over our senses and over our mind, we empower them to create a corresponding social reality which at least partially embodies them.



