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1

Kuitenbrouwer, Joost. Entre el terror y la ternura: Racionalidad instrumental, educación e interculturalidad. Santiago, Chile: ISS-CEAAL, 1992.

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2

Stanley, Philip E. A rule concordance and value guide. 2nd ed. [s.l.]: Astragal Press, 2004.

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3

Juicio ejecutivo cambiario: Letras de cambio, vales, conformes o pagarés, cheques. Montevideo: Ediciones Idea, 1986.

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4

Staub, Zeno. Management komplexer Zinsrisiken mit derivativen Instrumenten: Eine Anwendung des Value-at-risk-Konzeptes. Bern: P. Haupt, 1997.

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5

Hewson, John E. Process instrumentation manifolds: Their selection and use : a handbook. Research Triangle Park, N.C: Instrument Society of America, 1985.

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6

Antique brass wind instruments: Identification and value guide. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, Ltd., 1998.

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7

Deutsch, Gary M. Fair value reporting: Accounting for bank financial instruments. Austin, Tex: Sheshunoff, 1993.

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8

Ashenfelter, Orley. Estimating the value of a statistical life: The importance of omitted variables and publication bias. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2004.

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9

Ashenfelter, Orley. Estimating the value of a statistical life: The importance of omitted variables and publication bias. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2004.

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10

Bedi, Gurjendra S. Guidelines for inservice testing at nuclear power plants: Inservice testing of pumps and valves and inservice examination and testing of dynamic restraints (snubbers) at nuclear power plants : final report. Washington, D.C: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, 2013.

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11

Ludeman, Kate. The worth ethic: How to profit from the changing values of the new work force. New York: Dutton, 1989.

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12

The worth ethic: How to profit from the changing values of the new work force. New York: Dutton, 1989.

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13

Hartman, Andrew John. The role of students' goals and perceptions of instrumental value in the development of achievement motivation at junior high school. Urbana-Champaign: [s.n.], 1987.

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14

Austin, Paul. A modern value horn player's guide to the natural horn. Cincinnati, Ohio: P. Austin, 1993.

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15

Mahoney, Jeffrey P. Review of 1994 disclosures about derivative financial instruments and fair value of financial instruments. Norwalk, Conn: FASB, 1995.

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16

Mahoney, Jeffrey P. Review of 1994 disclosures about derivative financial instruments and fair value of financial instruments. Norwalk, Conn: Financial Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation, 1995.

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17

Mahoney, Jeffrey P. Review of 1994 disclosures about derivative financial instruments and fair value of financial instruments. Norwalk, CT: Financial Accounting Standards Board, 1995.

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18

Lorensen, Leonard. Illustrations of disclosures about fair value of financial instruments: A survey of the application of FASB statement no. 107. New York, N.Y: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, 1994.

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19

Luse, Nora. Domskiĭ kont͡s︡ertnyĭ zal i organnoe iskusstvo Sovetskoĭ Latvii. Riga: "Liesma", 1985.

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20

Medical, Data International Inc. Managed care, Medicare & third party payers: The quest for achieving and demonstrating value in medical technologies. Irvine, Calif: Medical Data International, 1998.

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21

Thrift, Stanley W. INSTRUCALC, version 3.0: Instrument engineering software for control valves, flow elements, and pressure relief devices, with auxiliary programs for fluid flow calculations for the IBM PC, XT, AT, PS/2, and compatibles. Houston, Tex: Gulf Pub. Co., 1991.

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22

Merwin, S. E. Value-impact study for implementation of a portable health physics instrumentation performance standard. Washington, DC: Division of Regulatory Applications, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1986.

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23

Merwin, S. E. Value-impact study for implementation of a portable health physics instrumentation performance standard. Washington, DC: Division of Regulatory Applications, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1986.

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24

Merwin, S. E. Value-impact study for implementation of a portable health physics instrumentation performance standard. Washington, DC: Division of Regulatory Applications, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1986.

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25

Miller, Frederick H. The ACDs of payment methods: ACH, cash, credit, and debit. Chicago: American Bar Association, 2007.

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26

Kroon, P. G. Wisselkoersveranderingen en fiscus. Deventer: FED, 2000.

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27

Glavovic, P. D. Wilderness and the law: A rationale for a new legal praxis for the protection of wilderness in South Africa in virtue of its instrumental, intrinsic and biocentric value : a conceptual and comparative commentary. Durban, Natal, South Africa: Law Books Press, 1995.

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28

Inherent Instrumental Values. International Scholars Publishers, 2005.

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29

Inherent Instrumental Values. International Scholars Publishers, 2005.

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30

Abbarno, G. John M. Inherent and Instrumental Values: Excursions in Value Inquiry. University Press of America, Incorporated, 2014.

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31

Vocal And Instrumental Groups: Making Music (Cocurricular Activities Their Values and Benefits). Mason Crest Publishers, 2005.

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32

Norelius, Caroline F. An examination of terminal and instrumental values of selected Oregon State University students. 1986.

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33

Tyler, Tom R. Value-Driven Behavior and the Law. Edited by Francesco Parisi. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684267.013.030.

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This article discusses an alternative approach to gaining compliance with the law. The approach involves motivating people through appeals to their values. Values reflect people's assessments of what is right or appropriate to do in a given situation; this involves people's feelings of obligation and responsibility to others. There are two arguments for value-based motivation. First, we gain the benefits of a value-based approach, e.g. increasing voluntary cooperation. Second, we avoid the problems associated with instrumental approaches. To gain these advantages we need to move to a system in which value-based motivations are the primary motivation tapped, and instrumental motivations are the backup for a small group that have to be dealt with instrumentally because they are unable or unwilling to act on their values.
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34

Maier, Pamela M. An examination of terminal and instrumental values of selected Oregon State University students majoring in speech communication. 1989.

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35

Ing, Michael D. K. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190679118.003.0009.

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This conclusion discusses the value of vulnerability. Expanding on the description of vulnerability provided in the introduction, it articulates a Confucian account of vulnerability that adds to the conversation in three ways: (a) it foregrounds the notion of vulnerability as an essential characteristic of human beings; (b) it stresses that vulnerability is good in instrumental and intrinsic ways (instrumentally it enables values such as morality, trust, and maturity and intrinsically vulnerability is a kind of caring about things; to be vulnerable is to be in a state of care—a condition of caring about people or things); (c) it provides a robust notion of self-cultivation designed to foster an optimal degree of vulnerability by means of ritual practice. The majority of the conclusion explores the instrumental and intrinsic values of vulnerability.
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36

Kim, Sungmoon. Procedure and Substance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190671235.003.0004.

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The pragmatic understanding of Confucian democracy not only establishes the inextricable intertwinement between democracy’s institutional-instrumental and moral-intrinsic values but further creates an equally intimate connection between Confucian substance and democratic procedure in a Confucian democracy. This chapter argues that in Confucian pragmatic democracy, democratic procedures exist not so much as formal institutional mechanisms that are neutral to or independent of Confucian values but as the value-laden conduit through which Confucian democratic substances are produced in the forms of Confucian democratic rights, Confucian justice, and Confucian democratic citizenship, thereby reinforcing a congruence between Confucian democracy’s instrumental and intrinsic values. It explains this double congruence that pragmatic Confucian democracy enables between substance and procedure and between intrinsic and instrumental values in terms of Confucian democratic perfectionism.
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37

Kim, Sungmoon. Value of Democracy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190671235.003.0003.

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Presenting pragmatic Confucian democracy as encompassing both Schumpeterian and Deweyan models of democracy, each focused on political institutions and a way of life respectively, this chapter argues that democracy as a social experience has both instrumental and intrinsic values and, to the extent that Confucian democracy is a kind of democracy, it too has and ought to have both instrumental and intrinsic values. Once introduced and justified as a political system on instrumental and consequential grounds, democracy attains its noninstrumental value as it gets consolidated as a way of life, in the course of which democratic institutions, rights, and practices are socially mediated by and negotiated with existing Confucian values, habits, mores, and moral sentiments. It is through such a complex process of social and cultural negotiations that democratic institutions, rights, and practices (i.e., a democratic way of life) can be made intelligent to and further cherished by citizens.
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38

Kallhoff, Angela. Water Ethics. Edited by Stephen M. Gardiner and Allen Thompson. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199941339.013.37.

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Water is a life-sustaining, common good that is particularly endangered by a growing world population and by climate change. This chapter discusses four normative approaches to water ethics in terms of a human right to water, an ecocentric approach to the non-instrumental values of water, water justice, and water cooperation. It argues that water cooperation is the most promising approach to resolving tragic conflicts. In particular, it is informed both by a rights-approach and by an ecocentric approach to water as a common good. Scholars are asked to draw a normative map related to values and interests in nature first—a map that highlights vulnerabilities of natural resources as well as the sources of value of these goods in concrete scenarios. The corresponding ethos is not one-dimensional; instead, it includes the value of integrity as well as approaches to an attitude of care and procedural fairness.
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39

Cutter, Mary Ann G. How Is Breast Cancer Evaluated? Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190637033.003.0004.

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The question “How is breast cancer evaluated?” raises a host of considerations, including ones about the role of values in clinical concepts, the kinds of clinical values in medical thinking, and the extent to which our evaluations of clinical phenomenon provide clinical certainty. What we find is that, initially, breast cancer is a treatment warrant and appears to fit the view of a clinical entity that is value-neutral. But things are not as simple as one would initially think. Upon reflection, descriptions and explanations of breast cancer are nested in evaluative frames of reference through which they are seen, interpreted, and acted upon. Clinical evaluations of breast cancer are complex and involve appeals to functional, instrumental, aesthetic, and ethical values. As a consequence, clinicians and patients face the recognition that clinical evaluations of breast cancer are to some extent uncertain, and a healthy sense of skepticism provides a check against an idealized sense of evaluation in breast cancer medicine.
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40

Schwartz, James S. J. The Value of Science in Space Exploration. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190069063.001.0001.

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The Value of Science in Space Exploration provides a rigorous assessment of the value of scientific knowledge and understanding in the context of contemporary space exploration. It argues that traditional spaceflight rationales are deficient, and that the strongest defense of spaceflight comes from its potential to produce intrinsically and instrumentally valuable knowledge and understanding. It engages with contemporary epistemology to articulate an account of the intrinsic value of scientific knowledge and understanding. It also parleys with recent work in science policy and social philosophy of science to characterize the instrumental value of scientific research, identifying space research as an effective generator of new knowledge and understanding. These values found an ethical obligation to engage in scientific examination of the space environment. This obligation has important implications for major space policy discussions, including debates surrounding planetary protection policies, space resource exploitation, and human space settlement. Whereas planetary protection policies are currently employed to prevent biological contamination only of sites of interest in the search for extraterrestrial life, it contends that all sites of interest to space science ought to be protected. Meanwhile, space resource exploitation and human space settlement would result in extensive disruption or destruction of pristine space environments. The overall ethical value of these environments in the production of new knowledge and understanding is greater than their value as commercial or real commodities, and thus, exploitation and settlement of space should be avoided until the scientific community adequately understands these environments.
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41

Public Administration Theories: Instrumental and Value Rationalities. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.

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42

Bogdandy, Armin von, Carlino Antpöhler, and Michael Ioannidis. Protecting EU values. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198746560.003.0013.

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This chapter discusses the instruments currently on the table regarding the enforcement of EU values, exposing their strengths and weaknesses in legal and practical terms. It also offers an evaluation of the first use of the Rule of Law Framework. So far, most of the proposed instruments have been presented in isolation. This is particularly true of the proposed ‘Copenhagen Commission’ and the ‘Reverse Solange’ mechanism. This chapter presents and normatively assesses the ideas proposed and discusses a possible way to combine instruments that so far have been considered separately. It argues that the most apt European response to systemic deficiencies is to combine judicial mechanisms, including the Reverse Solange mechanism, as well as a complementary political approach.
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43

Black, Helen K., John T. Groce, and Charles E. Harmon. Identity in Caregiving. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190602321.003.0002.

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In this chapter we use case studies and men’s own words to show how each man’s caregiving style reflected his sense of personal identity. We also examine if and how the legacy of his culture and family prepared him for the role of caregiver. Witnessing and taking part in caregiving earlier in life supported men’s belief in the moral worth of both affective and instrumental acts of providing care. The self-worth individuals found in caregiving both reflected and paralleled the self-esteem men found in maintaining important personal values, such as compassion, loyalty, helpfulness to others, and religious or spiritual faith.
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44

Kaveny, Cathleen. Juridical Insights and Theological Disputes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190612290.003.0007.

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This chapter highlights the methodological contributions of Robert E. Rodes Jr. Writing at the intersection of law and theology, Rodes shows how conceptual tools used to distinguish between different types of legal statements can shed light on knotty theological and ethical problems. He distinguishes among three functions of law: normative, constitutive, and epistemic. He also differentiates between two methods by which the law promotes moral values: didactic and instrumental. And he identifies two strategies for relating the church to the world: Erastian and High Church. By reframing conflicts like the one between religious liberty and same-sex marriage, Rodes offers legally-inspired strategies for diffusing the culture wars.
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45

Casal, Paula. Distributive Justice and Human Nature. Edited by Serena Olsaretti. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199645121.013.36.

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This chapter examines the relation between distributive doctrines and human nature. It reviews various responses to the conservative view that many progressive social reforms are doomed because of human nature. Some responses present a different view of human nature while others stress that human nature can be modified because it is the product of nurture or because it can be socially or biomedically altered. The chapter also offers an evolutionary approach to values like ‘liberté, égalité, fraternité’ and discusses whether human nature could have more than merely instrumental relevance to distributive justice. For example, our endorsement, and interpretation, of moral demands regarding human rights, human flourishing, and human capabilities, or even regarding the principles of sufficiency, equality and priority, may depend on assumptions about human nature.
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46

Lewenstein, Bruce V. Science Controversies. Edited by Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Dan M. Kahan, and Dietram A. Scheufele. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190497620.013.7.

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For some, the science of science communication offers a hope for managing controversies in which the bulk of the scientific community perceives a clear set of facts but where other forces shape public policy. For others, understanding controversies is less instrumental but instead useful in explicating the ways in which science is embedded in society. Adapting the latter tradition to the science of science communication requires drawing insights from case studies that highlight historical and contextual factors but that may lack the predictive power sought by those who would manage controversy. Some recurring themes in the controversy literature include technical efficiency versus social equity, regulation versus freedom of choice, progress versus traditional values, and political priorities versus environmental sustainability. The challenge is creating a science of complex social contexts that is self-reflective about how it is shaped by the social and political forces it seeks to describe and, sometimes, manage.
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47

Effects of expected-value information and display format on recognition of aircraft subsysten abnormalities. Hampton, Va: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center, 1994.

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48

H, Abbott Kathy, and Langley Research Center, eds. Effects of expected-value information and display format on recognition of aircraft subsystem abnormalities. Hampton, Va: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center, 1994.

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49

H, Abbott Kathy, and Langley Research Center, eds. Effects of expected-value information and display format on recognition of aircraft subsysten abnormalities. Hampton, Va: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center, 1994.

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50

Adams, Peter H. Antique Brass Wind Instruments: Identification and Value Guide. Schiffer Publishing, 2000.

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