Deep Dive Guide & Assessment Tools
💎 Sphere Overview
The Axiological Sphere encompasses the realm of values, ethics, meaning, and purpose. Derived from the Greek “axios” (worth) and “logos” (study), axiology is the philosophical study of value—what matters, why it matters, and how we determine worth. In transformation, this sphere reveals what truly drives decisions when external rules fall away.
Core Premise: Values are the invisible architecture shaping all visible behaviors. True transformation occurs only when values shift; everything else is just rearranging furniture. The Axiological Sphere is where we consciously examine and evolve what we hold sacred.
🏛️ Philosophical Foundations
The Nature of Values
Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic vs. Systemic Values
- Intrinsic Values
- Valued for their own sake
- Cannot be measured or compared
- Examples: Love, dignity, consciousness
- Organizational: Human potential, creativity
- Extrinsic Values
- Valued for what they produce
- Measurable and comparable
- Examples: Money, efficiency, productivity
- Organizational: Profit, market share
- Systemic Values
- Valued for fitting a system/concept
- Binary (fits or doesn’t)
- Examples: Compliance, accuracy, perfection
- Organizational: Quality standards, regulations
The Hierarchy: Intrinsic > Extrinsic > Systemic Yet most organizations invert this, prioritizing systemic over human values.
Rokeach’s Value System
Terminal Values (End States):
- Freedom
- Happiness
- Security
- Wisdom
- Equality
- Peace
Instrumental Values (Means):
- Honesty
- Courage
- Competence
- Imagination
- Logic
- Self-control
Key Insight: Conflicts arise when instrumental values don’t serve terminal values.
Ethical Frameworks in Practice
Deontological Ethics (Duty-Based)
“The right action is determined by rules/duties”
Organizational Application:
- Compliance-focused cultures
- Clear codes of conduct
- “Do the right thing regardless of outcome”
Strengths: Clear guidelines, consistency Weaknesses: Rigid, may ignore context
Example: Johnson & Johnson’s Credo driving Tylenol recall
Consequentialist Ethics (Outcome-Based)
“The right action produces the best consequences”
Organizational Application:
- Results-oriented cultures
- ROI-driven decisions
- “Ends justify means” thinking
Strengths: Practical, measurable Weaknesses: Can justify harmful means
Example: Amazon’s customer obsession at any cost
Virtue Ethics (Character-Based)
“The right action flows from virtuous character”
Organizational Application:
- Character-driven leadership
- Focus on organizational virtues
- “Who we are matters most”
Strengths: Holistic, develops people Weaknesses: Subjective, hard to scale
Example: Patagonia’s environmental activism
Care Ethics (Relationship-Based)
“The right action preserves relationships and care”
Organizational Application:
- Stakeholder-centric models
- Emphasis on interdependence
- “We’re all connected”
Strengths: Humanistic, sustainable Weaknesses: Can enable dysfunction
Example: Conscious Capitalism movement
The Structure of Meaning
Frankl’s Will to Meaning
Three sources of meaning:
- Creative values: What we give to world
- Experiential values: What we take from world
- Attitudinal values: Stance toward unavoidable suffering
Organizational Translation:
- Purpose: Why we exist (creative)
- Culture: How we experience work (experiential)
- Resilience: How we face adversity (attitudinal)
Spiral Dynamics Value Systems
Developmental Stages:
- Beige: Survival
- Purple: Tribal/Magical
- Red: Power/Dominance
- Blue: Order/Purpose
- Orange: Achievement/Success
- Green: Community/Equality
- Yellow: Integration/Systems
- Turquoise: Holistic/Global
Key Insight: Organizations can operate at multiple levels simultaneously, creating value conflicts.
💫 Values in Action
Values Emergence Process
Stage 1: Inherited Values
- Received from culture/family/tradition
- Unexamined acceptance
- “This is how things are done”
- Often unconscious
Organizational: Founder’s values become culture
Stage 2: Challenged Values
- Crisis reveals inadequacy
- Conflict with reality
- “This isn’t working anymore”
- Conscious questioning
Organizational: Market disruption challenges assumptions
Stage 3: Chosen Values
- Deliberate selection
- Tested through experience
- “This is what I/we stand for”
- Conscious commitment
Organizational: Values-driven transformation
Stage 4: Embodied Values
- Natural expression
- No effort required
- “This is who I/we am/are”
- Unconscious competence
Organizational: Values become cultural DNA
Values Conflicts & Resolution
Types of Values Conflicts
- Competing Commitments
- Growth vs. Sustainability
- Innovation vs. Stability
- Individual vs. Collective
- Short-term vs. Long-term
- Espoused vs. Enacted
- What we say vs. what we do
- Marketing vs. Reality
- Intention vs. Impact
- Stakeholder Tensions
- Shareholder vs. Employee
- Customer vs. Community
- Profit vs. Purpose
- Cultural Clashes
- National vs. Organizational
- Generational differences
- Professional vs. Personal
Values Conflict Resolution Framework
Step 1: Surface the Tension
- Name competing values explicitly
- Map stakeholder positions
- Identify underlying needs
Step 2: Find Higher Ground
- Seek transcendent value
- Reframe as polarity to manage
- Look for creative integration
Step 3: Design Experiments
- Test integrated approaches
- Measure multiple outcomes
- Iterate based on learning
Step 4: Embed Resolution
- Update policies/practices
- Share success stories
- Monitor for regression
Organizational Values Architecture
Levels of Values Expression
Individual Values
↓↑
Team Values
↓↑
Departmental Values
↓↑
Organizational Values
↓↑
Stakeholder Values
↓↑
Societal Values
Alignment Challenge: Each level must honor those above/below while maintaining integrity.
Values Activation Mechanisms
- Structural Embedding
- Hiring criteria
- Promotion decisions
- Resource allocation
- Reward systems
- Cultural Reinforcement
- Stories and legends
- Rituals and ceremonies
- Language and symbols
- Leadership modeling
- Process Integration
- Decision frameworks
- Planning processes
- Performance metrics
- Feedback loops
- External Expression
- Brand promise
- Customer experience
- Partner selection
- Community engagement
🧭 Purpose & Meaning Architecture
Purpose Hierarchy
Levels of Purpose
- Individual Purpose
- Personal mission
- Unique contribution
- Life meaning
- Role Purpose
- Job contribution
- Professional identity
- Skill expression
- Team Purpose
- Collective mission
- Shared goals
- Synergistic value
- Organizational Purpose
- Company mission
- Market contribution
- Stakeholder value
- Societal Purpose
- Global impact
- Future legacy
- Civilization advancement
Purpose Discovery Process
For Individuals:
- Passion Intersection: What energizes you?
- Talent Expression: What are you great at?
- World Need: What does society require?
- Economic Engine: What can sustain you?
For Organizations:
- Origin Story: Why were we created?
- Unique Value: What only we can do?
- Future Vision: What world we’re creating?
- Present Impact: How we serve today?
Meaning-Making Mechanisms
Sensemaking in Organizations
Components:
- Noticing: What signals matter?
- Categorizing: How do we frame?
- Labeling: What do we call it?
- Presuming: What do we assume?
- Acting: How do we respond?
- Committing: What do we choose?
Collective Sensemaking Tools:
- After-action reviews
- Story harvesting
- Pattern recognition sessions
- Future-back planning
Narrative Architecture
Master Narratives Shape Reality:
- Origin Story
- Where we came from
- Why we exist
- What we overcame
- Identity Story
- Who we are
- What we stand for
- How we’re different
- Future Story
- Where we’re going
- What we’re building
- Why it matters
- Values Story
- What we believe
- How we decide
- What we sacrifice for
📊 AXIOLOGICAL Assessment Template
Part 1: Values Inventory
Personal/Organizational Values Scan
| Value Category | Current Priority (1-10) | Lived Reality (1-10) | Gap | Evidence |
| Achievement | ||||
| Autonomy | ||||
| Balance | ||||
| Challenge | ||||
| Community | ||||
| Competence | ||||
| Creativity | ||||
| Fairness | ||||
| Growth | ||||
| Impact | ||||
| Innovation | ||||
| Integrity | ||||
| Learning | ||||
| Recognition | ||||
| Relationships | ||||
| Security | ||||
| Service | ||||
| Tradition |
Top 5 Core Values:
- _________________ (Why this matters: _________________)
- _________________ (Why this matters: _________________)
- _________________ (Why this matters: _________________)
- _________________ (Why this matters: _________________)
- _________________ (Why this matters: _________________)
Part 2: Values Conflict Analysis
Identify Current Tensions:
| Value A | Value B | Conflict Description | Impact | Resolution Strategy |
Conflict Patterns:
- [ ] Individual vs. Collective
- [ ] Short-term vs. Long-term
- [ ] Growth vs. Sustainability
- [ ] Innovation vs. Stability
- [ ] Efficiency vs. Humanity
- [ ] Local vs. Global
- [ ] Other: _____________
Part 3: Ethical Framework Assessment
Dominant Ethical Orientation:
| Framework | Use Frequency | Comfort Level | Effectiveness | Examples |
| Duty-Based | ☐ Never ☐ Sometimes ☐ Often ☐ Always | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | |
| Outcome-Based | ☐ Never ☐ Sometimes ☐ Often ☐ Always | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | |
| Virtue-Based | ☐ Never ☐ Sometimes ☐ Often ☐ Always | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | |
| Care-Based | ☐ Never ☐ Sometimes ☐ Often ☐ Always | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High | ☐ Low ☐ Med ☐ High |
Part 4: Purpose Clarity Matrix
Rate clarity at each level (1-10):
| Purpose Level | Clarity | Alignment | Energy | Evidence |
| Personal Life Purpose | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | |
| Professional Purpose | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | |
| Role Purpose | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | |
| Team Purpose | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | |
| Organizational Purpose | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 |
Purpose Statement Draft: “I/We exist to _________________________________ by _________________________________ so that _________________________________.”
Part 5: Meaning-Making Inventory
Sources of Meaning:
| Source | Strength (1-10) | Examples | Growth Opportunity |
| Creative (What I/we create) | _/10 | ||
| Experiential (What I/we experience) | _/10 | ||
| Attitudinal (How I/we face challenges) | _/10 | ||
| Relational (Who I/we serve) | _/10 | ||
| Transcendent (What’s beyond me/us) | _/10 |
Part 6: Values-Action Alignment Audit
Test: Where do values show up in action?
| Decision Point | Values Considered | Values Ignored | Outcome | Learning |
| Hiring | ||||
| Firing | ||||
| Investment | ||||
| Strategy | ||||
| Crisis Response | ||||
| Daily Operations |
Part 7: Shadow Values Detection
What values do we deny but demonstrate?
| Denied Value | Evidence of Presence | Impact | Integration Path |
| Power | |||
| Competition | |||
| Security | |||
| Control | |||
| Recognition |
🛠️ Axiological Tools
- Values Clarification Exercise
The Mountain Exercise:
Peak Values
(Ultimate)
△
/ \
/ \
Core Values Core Values
(Essential) (Essential)
/ \
/ \
Supporting Values Supporting Values
(Important) (Important)
/ \
/ \
Base Values ――――――――――――― Base Values
(Foundational) (Foundational)
Process:
- List all values that matter
- Arrange in mountain formation
- Test: What would you sacrifice?
- Refine until stable
- Ethical Decision Matrix
For complex decisions:
| Option | Duty Score | Outcome Score | Virtue Score | Care Score | Total | Risks |
| A | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/40 | |
| B | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/40 | |
| C | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/10 | _/40 |
Weighting: Adjust based on context and values
- Purpose Discovery Canvas
┌─────────────────┬─────────────────┬─────────────────┐
│ PASSION │ TALENT │ NEED │
│ What energizes │ What I’m/we’re │ What world │
│ me/us? │ great at? │ requires? │
├─────────────────┴─────────────────┴─────────────────┤
│ PURPOSE │
│ (Intersection of all 3) │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ EXPRESSION │
│ How purpose shows up in: │
│ • Daily work: │
│ • Key decisions: │
│ • Relationships: │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
- Values Conversation Guide
For team/organizational alignment:
Round 1: Individual Sharing (No debate)
- Each person shares top 3 values
- Explains why they matter
- Gives concrete examples
Round 2: Pattern Recognition
- What values appear repeatedly?
- What unique values emerge?
- What tensions exist?
Round 3: Integration Design
- How can different values coexist?
- What practices honor all?
- What requires sacrifice?
Round 4: Commitment Creation
- What will we uphold together?
- How will we handle conflicts?
- What keeps us accountable?
- Meaning Momentum Tracker
Weekly Review:
| Day | Meaning Moment | Value Expressed | Energy Impact | Learning |
| Mon | ↑ → ↓ | |||
| Tue | ↑ → ↓ | |||
| Wed | ↑ → ↓ | |||
| Thu | ↑ → ↓ | |||
| Fri | ↑ → ↓ |
Patterns: What creates meaning? What drains it?
🌟 Advanced Axiological Concepts
Values Evolution Dynamics
The Values Spiral
Values don’t change linearly but spiral:
- Thesis: Initial value commitment
- Antithesis: Challenge/shadow emerges
- Synthesis: Integration at higher level
- New Thesis: Evolved value emerges
Example:
- Thesis: “Customer first”
- Antithesis: Employee burnout
- Synthesis: “Sustainable service”
- New Thesis: “Regenerative business”
Values Metabolism
Organizations digest experiences into values:
- Ingestion: New experience enters
- Digestion: Processing what it means
- Absorption: Integrating lessons
- Elimination: Releasing what doesn’t serve
- Transformation: Becoming different
The Ethics of Power
Power + Values = Impact
Power without values: Tyranny Values without power: Impotence Power with values: Transformation
Types of Organizational Power:
- Position: Formal authority
- Resource: Control of assets
- Expert: Specialized knowledge
- Referent: Personal influence
- Information: Access to data
- Connection: Network reach
Ethical Power Principles:
- Power exists to serve purpose
- Authority requires accountability
- Influence demands integrity
- Control creates responsibility
Transcendent Values
Beyond Polarity
Advanced values work transcends either/or:
Traditional: Profit OR Purpose Transcendent: Profit THROUGH Purpose
Traditional: Individual OR Collective Transcendent: Individual AND Collective
Traditional: Competition OR Collaboration
Transcendent: Collaborative Competition
Meta-Values
Values about values:
- Coherence: Do our values align?
- Evolution: Can our values grow?
- Inclusion: Do values embrace all?
- Wisdom: Do values create flourishing?
💎 Integration with Other Spheres
Axiological + Archetypal
- Archetypes embody value systems
- Myths transmit values across time
- Shadow reveals denied values
- Transformation shifts core values
Axiological + Technical
- Systems encode values
- Metrics reflect priorities
- Processes embody ethics
- Technology amplifies values
Axiological + Liminal
- Crisis reveals true values
- Transition tests commitments
- New values emerge in void
- Integration requires value alignment
Axiological + Social
- Values attract/repel people
- Culture transmits values
- Relationships test values
- Community embodies values
📚 Case Studies
Case 1: Interface Inc. – Ray Anderson’s Conversion
Before: Traditional carpet manufacturer Awakening: CEO reads “Ecology of Commerce” Values Shift: Profit → Purpose → Planet Implementation: Mission Zero (zero environmental impact) Result: Industry transformation, sustained profitability
Key Learning: Personal values evolution can transform entire industries
Case 2: CVS Health – Tobacco Decision
Dilemma: Pharmacy selling cigarettes Values Conflict: Health vs. $2B revenue Decision: Stop selling tobacco Short-term: Revenue loss Long-term: Health positioning, new partnerships
Key Learning: Authentic values decisions create new opportunities
Case 3: Gravity Payments – $70K Minimum Wage
Values Statement: Every employee deserves living wage Action: CEO cuts own pay, raises minimum to $70K Reaction: Media storm, client losses, staff skepticism Result: 91% staff retention, revenue tripled
Key Learning: Radical values alignment attracts aligned stakeholders
🎯 Quick Practice Guide
Daily Values Practice
Morning Question: “What value will I embody today?” Decision Check: “Does this align with my/our values?” Evening Reflection: “Where did I honor/betray values?”
Weekly Values Review
- Wins: Where values created success
- Conflicts: Where values competed
- Growth: What values evolved
- Focus: Next week’s value emphasis
Monthly Values Audit
- Review decisions through values lens
- Check stakeholder value alignment
- Assess values-action gaps
- Plan values-based improvements
Quarterly Values Evolution
- Revisit core values list
- Test against recent experience
- Refine/evolve as needed
- Communicate changes
🔑 The Axiological Key
The Axiological Sphere reminds us:
- Values are the DNA of transformation
- Purpose provides sustainable energy
- Meaning makes difficulty worthwhile
- Ethics guide when rules fail
- Alignment creates coherent power
Master values, and you master the invisible forces shaping all visible outcomes.
“When values are clear, decisions are easy.”