... increasingly desirable component into an increasingly undesirable one, and vice versa. If the compo- nents are to be partitioned according to whether they are increasingly desirable or increasingly undesirable, such a reframing must ...
... increasingly difficult to select the best adapted gear ratio in the actual operation of a car when there are a great ... desirable than three , or that three are more desirable than two - although in average practice this latter ...
... increasingly desirable , but also a renewed appreciation of intellectual knowledge and technical expertise in comparison to political virtue . Hitherto prohibited or unheard - of occupations such as being an entrepreneur have gained ...
... increasingly viewed as an instrument for advancing public as well as private interests promoting , for example , civil rights , consumer welfare , and environmental protection it became more difficult to think of procedure as merely ...
... more conspicuous good is more desirable than the less conspicuous, and the more difficult than the easier: for we appreciate better the possession of things that cannot be easily acquired. Also the more personal possession is more ...
... more freedom and fully called by a venerable prelate [ Dr. Shipley , boldness than during that interval . Our ances Bishop of St. Asaph ] , who never made a step to- tors and the heroic Prince who governed them . ward greatness without ...
... more desirable than a means , and the means that best achieves the end is more desirable than the means which achieves the end less well . How are such moves employed in a debate of the form we have just outlined ? In order to ...
... more desirable " is this com- modity . Also , the more we gain by the addition of a thing , the higher is its value . The context makes it quite clear that Aristotle applies his argument to economic goods ( exam- ple of the pruning ...
... Desirable It is desirable to believe true propositions and undesirable to disbelieve them . ( Horwich 2010 , 57 ) and , allowing for degrees of belief and desire : Desirable * It is increasingly desirable to have relatively high degrees ...
... more precious and praiseworthy is more desirable, e.g. friendship than wealth, and justice than strength. For the former belong in themselves to the class of things precious and praiseworthy, while the latter do so not in themselves ...