Conceptual background

the value of meaningfulness

Motivation

Our need for meaningfulness is a neglected source of motivation in economic behaviour and collective action. The value of meaningfulness plays a role in practical reasoning by helping us to answer the question – ‘what ought we to do?’

Structure

Meaningfulness has a moral structure that can be described, institutionalised, and applied to meaning-making. People craft a sense of meaning and purpose from diverse meaning sources. By offering people an abundance of meanings, cities can provide inclusive and satisfying environments for creating life and work meaning.

Design

The value of meaningfulness can be designed into organisations, systems, cities, and economies, to create sustainable, resilient, and inclusive places to work and to live.

Making Meaningful Cities: A Process Model

the philosophy of meaningfulness

Well-being

Meaningfulness is a route to well-being. Richard Arneson (2006), says: ‘nothing that an individual does or gets contributes in itself to her well-being unless the thing is both objectively valuable and positively engages her subjectivity.

Moral value

Meaningfulness is a moral value. Susan Wolf (2010) describes meaningfulness as a distinct value that integrates objective and subjective dimensions. ‘Meaning arises when subjective attraction meets objective attractiveness’.

Not for self but for all written on the side of a city building

Human need

Meaning in life and work is an important human need. People can derive a sense of meaning from their activities when these provide them with the goods of meaningfulness (such as, autonomy, freedom and dignity), are directed towards taking care of valuable beings and things, and are experienced as emotionally engaging and worthwhile.

Human flourishing

Meaning in life and work is a central component of human flourishing, and well-being. But our need for meaning has been neglected in public policy. The Meaningful City project aims to highlight the role that meaning can play in designing and implementing policies and practices that recognise the need we have to do good quality work in interesting and engaging places to live. Work and places where we have a sense of belonging, and a say over how these are developed.

meaningful cities

The Meaningful Cities project aims to better understand how urban dwellers and workers derive a sense of meaning and purpose from the places where they live and work.

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