| Meeting 18 June 2010 - Agenda  Note1 #111227 Some thoughts on a starting point for discussion - for others to add to or edit as desired. | 
|       If the values are     universal why is it necessary (and are there any disadvantages/advantages) - to put them in a written form like the UN     Declaration?      Can individual     'rights/values' or groups of them included in the Declaration be 'pared back'?     For example, in trying to understand/define certain rights/values, could one     undertake a similar exercise to the semantic one for example, trying to     define/explain the difference between 'cup' and 'mug' or 'envy' and 'jealousy' (so that there may be fewer more fundamental rights' rather than 'variations on a theme')?.      Are there particular     'rights' included in the UN Declaration that have already not been accepted by other cultures?      Are there any     'universal' rights/values that should apply to animals and could this also have     cross-cultural implications?       What kind of structure for the     map - by individual     value or by a     question like the Technology: oppressor or liberator? map, or...? |