Instrumentality Quotes

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The only instrument through which time could be converted to yield greatness is the instrumentality of work.

Sunday Adelaja
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The only instrument through which time could be converted to yield greatness is the instrumentality of work.

Sunday Adelaja, How To Become Great Through Time Conversion: Are you wasting time, spending time or investing time?
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Insofar as he makes use of his healthy senses, man himself is the best and most exact scientific instrument possible. The greatest misfortune of modern physics is that its experiments have been set apart from man, as it were, physics refuses to recognize nature in anything not shown by artificial instruments, and even uses this as a measure of its accomplishments.

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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The audacity of my sagacity is instrumentality to my successity.

Ifeanyi Enoch Onuoha
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The goal is not to be delivered of your problem only but to be an instrument of God

Sunday Adelaja
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We can easily imagine a monetary organization which, by the exclusive use of notes or clearing-house methods, allows all transfers to be made with the instrumentality of sums of money that never change their position in space.If differences due to the geographical position of money are disregarded in this way, we get the following law for the exchange-ratio between money and other economic goods: every economic good, that is ready for consumption (in the sense in which that phrase is usually understood in commerce and technology), has a subjective use-value qua consumption good at the place where it is and qua production good at those places to which it may be brought for consumption.

Ludwig von Mises, The Theory of Money and Credit
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The government desires to purchase; it desires to use the market, not to disorganize it. But the officially-fixed price does disorganize the market in which commodities and services are bought and sold for money. Commerce, so far as it is able, seeks relief in other ways. It re-develops a system of direct exchange, in which commodities and services are exchanged without the instrumentality of money. Those who are forced to dispose of commodities and services at the fixed prices do not dispose of them to everybody, but merely to those to whom they wish to do a favour. Would-be purchasers wait in long queues in order to snap up what they can get before it is too late; they race breathlessly from shop to shop, hoping to find one that is not yet sold out.

Ludwig von Mises, The Theory of Money and Credit
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