Abstract
In the context of changing world political order, accompanied by economic and military-political confrontations, humanity has faced the question of reassessing the strategic values of development. A person needs to understand how to actualize the values of their own spiritual potential in order to survive in difficult life situations. Values are not just a subjective life guideline, they are embedded in the biosocial nature of man, in the basic laws of existence. Values are an important component of the process of evolutionary self-organization of the Universe as a structural complication of systems based on self-referential information feedback, which leads to an increase in the degree of order, an important part of which is the development of a strategy for the development of complex and supercomplex systems (M. Lupisella). A model for such development of a systems development strategy is the development of strategies using artificial intelligence (G. Kissinger, E. Schmidt, D. Huttenlocher). The mechanism for the direct realization of values is evaluation, which is a continuation of the self-regulatory mechanism of recursive and self-referential information feedback that permeates both biological and non-biological – hierarchically simpler physical systems that are characterized by self-organization. In modern society, human life is becoming more complex, the mechanisms for regulating society are becoming more sophisticated, as a result, values are pluralizing, and they extend to almost all spheres of life. In an era of radical civilizational transformation and military-political crises, the understanding that the survival of both society and each individual is impossible without the intensive development of their moral qualities, the ability to take consolidated actions with fellow citizens for the sake of realizing common values that are rooted in the very existence of man, comes to the fore.
References
Agrawal, A., Gans, J. & Golgfarb, A. (2024). Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence. In Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks. 112 books in one that will help you bring innovation to life, рр. 147-162. Сompiler : TOV “Monolit Bizz”. Kharkiv, Monolit Bizz.
Bornet, P., Barkin, I. & Wirtz, J. (2024). Intelligent Automation: Welcome to the World of Hyperautomation: Learn How to Harness Artificial Intelligence to Boost Business & Make Our World More Human. In Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks. 112 books in one that will help you bring innovation to life, рр. 25-43. Сompiler : TOV “Monolit Bizz”. Kharkiv, Monolit Bizz.
Gawdat, M. (2024). Scary Smart. The Future of Artificial Intelligence and How You Can Save Our World. In Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks. 112 books in one that will help you bring innovation to life, рр. 9-24. Сompiler : TOV “Monolit Bizz”. Kharkiv, Monolit Bizz.
Kissinger, H. A., Schmidt, E. & Huttenlocher, D. (2024).The Age of AI: And Our Human Future In Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks. 112 books in one that will help you bring innovation to life, рр. 61-80. Сompiler : TOV “Monolit Bizz”. Kharkiv, Monolit Bizz.
Le Cun, Ya. (2024). Quand la machine apprend: La revolution des neurons artificiels et de l’apprentissage profonde. In Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks. 112 books in one that will help you bring innovation to life, рр. 95-112. Сompiler : TOV “Monolit Bizz”. Kharkiv, Monolit Bizz, 2024.
Tegmark, M. (2019). Life 3.0. Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. Kyiv : Nash Format, 432 p.
Taylor, Ch. (2018). A Secular Age. First book. Panych, О. (Trans.). Kyiv : DUKH I LITERA. 664 p.
Taylor, Ch. (2018). A Secular Age. Second book. Panych, О. (Trans). Kyiv : DUKH I LITERA, 2018. 616 p.
Harari, Yu. N. (2021). Sapiens. A Brief History of Humankind. Demyanchuk, О. (Trans). Kyiv : Fors Ukraina. 544 p.
Chang, Y.-T. (2021). A Davidsonian Theory of Evaluative Judgment. In Donald Davidson on Action, Mind and Value. Logic in Asia: Studia Logica Library. Yang, C. M. & Myers, R. H. (Еds.) Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd, рр. 55-75. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-7230-2_4
Corkum, P. (2024). Philosophy’s past: Cognitive values and the history of philosophy. In Philosophy and Phenomenology Research; 108:585–606. https://doi.org/10.1111/phpr.12990
Engel, P. (2021). Davidson on Emotions and Values. In Donald Davidson on Action, Mind and Value, Logic in Asia: Studia Logica Library. Yang, S. C. M. & Myers, R. H. (Еds.), Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd, рр. 77-92. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-7230-2_5
Gabriel, I. (2020). Artificial Intelligence, Values, and Alignment. In Minds and Machines, 30:411-437. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11023-020-09539-2
Lupisella, M. (2020). Cosmological Theories of Value. Science, Philosophy, and Meaning in Cosmic Evolution. Space and Society Editor-in-Chief: Douglas A. Vakoch. METI International, San Francisco, CA, USA. Springer Nature Switzerland AG. 221 p. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25339-4
Riedener, S. (2021). Uncertain Values. An Axiomatic Approach to Axiological Uncertainty. Hinsch, W. & Schmidt, Th. (Eds). De Gruyter. Berlin/Boston. 169 p.
Sommer, A. U. (2024). Values. Why We Need Them Although They Don’t Exist. Richards, Р. (Trans.). Palgrave Macmillan. Springer Nature. Switzerland. AG. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-42159-4
Vydra, A. (2023). The value of philosophy: A Canguilhemian perspective. In Metaphilosophy, 54:553–564. Metaphilosophy LLC and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/meta.12645

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
