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While beliefs feel true, values feel important.

What we believe represents our perceptions of truth and reality. Values relate to our judgements of importance and meaning. In other words, beliefs are about what we think is true; values are about what we believe matters. Understanding this difference provides insight into our worldviews and motivations.
Beliefs form the foundation of our knowledge, opinions, and assumptions about the world. Our beliefs come from learning, experiences, and socialisation that construct our sense of factual reality.
Human beliefs are imperfect and coloured by biases. Two people can observe the same event and come to different conclusions about what is true based on their existing beliefs. Evidence is often interpreted subjectively through the lens of faith.
Values exert influence differently. Values reflect our priorities, convictions, and ideals about what is desirable or worth caring about.
Values drive our sense of right and wrong. They shape our morality and choices by distinguishing good from bad, noble from evil, and just from unjust.
Values serve as guides for how we conduct ourselves and evaluate meaning. Facts do not determine values; we decide what merits value in any context.