“… 6. Albert Ogien also differentiates between the second and third meanings of ‘values’ but he does so by reducing the first meaning to abstract values alone, which he assimilates to institutions, and does not include tangible values or the good: ‘Values sometimes refer to social institutions (family, nation, religion, secularism, the Republic) or to principles which underpin what is considered to be our common humanity (dignity, freedom, equality, honour, responsibility, fidelity, generosity). This difference is important: while institutions are contingent and constantly subject to criticism which may make them obsolete or transform them, principles have a certain permanence and are the invariable resources that serve to elaborate this criticism’ (Ogien, 2016: 28). …”