According to Ruth Chang, two items may be evaluatively comparable even when neither is better than, worse than, or equally good as the other. There is a fourth kind of comparability: The two items may be on a par. Recently, Joshua Gert has suggested that this somewhat elusive notion of evaluative parity can be easily accounted for if one interprets value comparisons as normative assessments of preference: The distinction between equality in value and parity becomes unproblematic on this approach. As I show, the approach in question, if appropriately extended, also allows for a straightforward distinction between parity and incomparability. However, while Gert’s basic proposal is attractive, the way he develops it is flawed. He takes it that...