Axiology is a component of ethics. It is the general theory of values and involves the study and analysis of things that are ultimately valuable or unworthy. Human ideas, wants, and longings are not separate from values. Fundamentally, values are relational. It seems to be a partnership. Our life experience prevents us from perceiving it. In a human community, values are placed in a hierarchical manner according to their significance and specific social norms that stem from the group’s practical and spiritual needs. Along with poles, values possess degrees. From unpleasant to agreeable, from appealing to unattractive, from virtuous to sinful, and from just to unjust, there are many degrees. Value is a pure and necessary item. Social-human action produces values. Value is a latent model for action as well as an impulse to act. From an axiological perspective, a person gains worth by being someone, and being someone is defined by doing something. Value adds a human element to meeting human needs and creates new societal and human needs as a result of cultural production. Axiological investigation looks at the hidden aspects of human behaviour rather than the obvious ones. The goal of the paper is to examine the axiological dimensions of the nature and meaning of value.
S C. CHAUDHURY (Wed,) studied this question.