![]() 1 A practical judgment or, as Sen calls it, an evaluative judgment, is the final phase of an act of evaluation about one’s desired quotidian outcomes, means, and ends-in-view. Hence it is possible to identify some interesting connections between Sen’s paradigm and Mead’s social theory of the self that would implement “a pragmatist and institutionalist account of evaluation” (De Munck & Zimmermann 2015: 132) from a transdisciplinary perspective aiming to address how valuable options are constituted and practical judgments formulated.
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