Metal coins had an intrinsic value based on the scarcity of the elements used in making them. |
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It is open to the general public and aims to underline the intrinsic value of the subject as a core life skill. |
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Often the intrinsic value is the underlying price of a company's total assets. |
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They are a non-productive, consuming society, employed in make-work services, which have no intrinsic value. |
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I have been arguing that it is right to say, as most of us want to do, that natural goods have an intrinsic value. |
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Lastly, I am satisfied that the proposal would not undermine the intrinsic value of natural or cultural assets. |
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Now whatever the intrinsic value of these proverbs, there's no taking away from the harm they cause. |
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By the same token, investors are starting to recognise the intrinsic value of more profitable old economy businesses. |
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At its best, athletic competition can hold intrinsic value for our society. |
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Martha said the plantings had more sentimental value than they did intrinsic value. |
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Socrates believed in the intrinsic value of asking honest questions and challenging orthodoxy. |
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And men avoid gold-diggers by giving only gifts that have no intrinsic value. |
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A restored work, no matter how expertly done, can never have the same intrinsic value as a well-preserved one. |
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However, it is unclear why intrinsic value should attach to cultural survival as such. |
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Attempts to measure freedom are notoriously complicated, as are attempts to assign an intrinsic value to freedom as such. |
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Brandes believes the market will eventually recognize the value of such a company and its stock price will rise towards its intrinsic value. |
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When asked to justify an alleged moral rule, duty or its corresponding right, deontologists may appeal to the intrinsic value of those beings to whom it applies. |
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It comprises a belief in the intrinsic value of every individual human being and a sense of obligation to our neighbour. |
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When the actual intrinsic value of the metal becomes greater than the nominal value of the coin, change disappears. |
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They respect human life and expect our Parliament to defend the intrinsic value of human life. |
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Replacement values typically are calculated using an arboricultural industry formula based on a particular tree's intrinsic value for size, species, and health. |
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The immoral nature of such an act is also clear, since all life possesses intrinsic value and sacredness that no illness can diminish. |
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The items recognised to equity correspond to changes in the intrinsic value not including the accrued coupon of the cap. |
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This type of professional looks for growth at above-average rates and looks to buy at a discount to intrinsic value. |
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A helpful assumption often made in axiology is that intrinsic value is had not just by anything at all, but rather by states of affairs or propositions. |
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One is looking at investment in terms of culture. That in itself has its own intrinsic value and is a necessary life force in our society. |
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What an opportunity for true investors that acquire shares of such a great company at a price well bellow intrinsic value. |
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My conclusions from the debate included the fact that animals are sentient creatures with an intrinsic value. |
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Adherents of civic republicanism, who see an intrinsic value in political participation. |
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For a relatively small 'biocentric' audience, for whom nature has intrinsic value, Loss messages provide an obvious imperative for action. |
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I dare hope that the scientists will deem this document on its intrinsic value and not on my limited knowledge in geomorphologic science. |
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Much of the intrinsic value of the ITSA program resides in this blended learning approach of technical and nontechnical skills development. |
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All these figures do not include the intrinsic value of the precious metal. |
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This effectiveness test is carried out by separating the intrinsic value of the option from its time value. |
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The warrant value will be higher than the intrinsic value of the Warrant because of the time value. |
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The Company applies the intrinsic value based method of accounting for stock-based compensation awards granted to employees. |
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It may take some time for a bargain stock to be recognized by the marketplace, and to rise in price to reflect its intrinsic value. |
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We share the Earth with many other life-forms that have their own intrinsic value. |
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The rights of the union and the employees have intrinsic value and compensation is warranted for their deprivation. |
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Its size and intrinsic value make this one of Canada's major collections and the most important of its kind in Quebec. |
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Participatory governance is of intrinsic value by giving voice to citizens in making decisions that affect the quality of their lives. |
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Token money has an intrinsic value less than its face value. |
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Beyond its intrinsic value, improved health contributes to social well-being through its impact on economic development, competitiveness and productivity. |
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If so, the deontologist may, by reference to the intrinsic value of such species, be hesitant to grant permission. |
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The premiss which confers intrinsic value on this far-reaching strategy, is our wish to strengthen the drive towards democracy now gathering momentum in Latin America. |
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He takes greatness of kingdoms according to bulk and currency, and not after their intrinsic value. |
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The merger is effected based on the intrinsic value of the companies concerned, in which the property involved is valued by a team of independent property valuers at market value. |
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Company selection utilizes fundamental research to forecast mid-cycle earnings in order to estimate a company's intrinsic value over a full business cycle. |
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Thus, Roman money's utility as a unit of exchange consistently exceeded its intrinsic value as metal. |
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The Life insurance fund managers Britannic Group and Resolution Life will soon become a single group with a combined intrinsic value of £2.1 billion. |
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If, as he believed, life neither possesses nor lacks intrinsic value and yet is always being evaluated, then such evaluations can usefully be read as symptoms of the condition of the evaluator. |
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When one respects the intrinsic value of a program, the economic model is much more point-to-multipoint, with respect to the cost of a film, for instance, than point-to-point, as in the case of Napster. |
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They have an intrinsic value and should be dealt with as such. |
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In fact, solidarity inspired the trade union movement and was an intrinsic value that helped to unify the Polish nation which had been subjected to the indoctrination of dialectics and class warfare. |
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Technical analysis, the polar opposite of fundamental analysis, is not concerned with a stock's intrinsic value, but instead looks at past market activity to determine future price movements. |
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Through their size and intrinsic value, these two collections are considered to be among Canada's major collections and the most important of their kind in Quebec. |
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Pure technical analysts couldn't care less about the elusive intrinsic value of a company or any other factors that preoccupy fundamental analysts, such as managements, business models, or competition. |
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Technicians don't believe that a stock has any intrinsic value. |
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Collectibles have both monetary and intrinsic value. |
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Income can be recognized in both its constitutive and instrumental roles, though in most cases, instrumentality is much more important than its intrinsic value. |
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It is thus distinct from axiological or normative hedonism, the view that only pleasure has intrinsic value, and from ethical hedonism, the view that pleasure-producing actions are morally right. |
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It is a contract between the issuer, the Bank of Canada, and the guarantor, that is the government, and that is the source of the trust we can put in a bank note that has no intrinsic value. |
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If short-term results fall short of expectations, the intrinsic value of the underlying assets of the issuer should provide important downside protection. |
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Because our existence has no intrinsic value, it can take on whatever value that we autarkically choose to give it. |
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It is of great intrinsic value and must not be used to gain advantages in other policy fields by being a pawn in negotiating tactics and games that it is all too easy to see through. |
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This fact often presents us opportunities to acquire assets in the public market at less than intrinsic value, but can similarly affect your shareholdings in our company for periods of time. |
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The denaturing and mechanizing of the biological kingdom eliminated intrinsic value and replaced it with John Locke's notion of utility value. |
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In this sense, financial analysts and shareholders have not always fulfilled their role, being too focused on increasing profits on investments without ever stopping to question their intrinsic value. |
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The proclamation required that the coins weigh one and two ounces respectively, bringing the intrinsic value of the coins close to their face value. |
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This means the results of the survey and any apparent change in ranking are highly questionable, and that a high ranking has no real intrinsic value in any case. |
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It should have constant intrinsic value and stable purchasing power. |
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The first instances of money were objects with intrinsic value. |
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Another form of market failure is speculation, where transactions are made to profit from short term fluctuation, rather from the intrinsic value of the companies or products. |
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