Equality is the abstract
exchangeability or substitutability of one for another, the irrelevance of the difference between the one and its other, the suppression of everything that makes the one different from the other.
In addition, for example, if each local autonomy were to independently adopt a different IT system, there would be enormous costs for the integration of those systems or creating
exchangeability among themselves.
As was previously disclosed, the provision for income taxes under Adjusted Earnings for the fourth quarter and full year 2017 for consolidated BGC was lower due to an increase in grants of
exchangeability related to the Company's long-term efforts to retain executives and partners across Financial Services and Real Estate Services.
(29) Littlejohn discusses critically a similar principle, which he calls
Exchangeability. "
Exchangeability: if the fact that p constitutes a potent normative reason for A to /that has weight W, the fact that it seems to A that p constitutes a potent normative reason for A to/that also has W" ("Being More Realistic about Reasons," 10).
The absolute and crying need of the hour, therefore, is to neutralize the printed-paper 'value determination mechanism' with a common global denominator for trade, based on universal
exchangeability. Bilateralism and barter based value indexation for trade is about the only way forward.
This approach enabled
exchangeability between intervention and control groups by ensuring that neighborhoods within a specific propensity score strata were compared.
It has also developed other cables that allow cable lengths of up to eight metres without having to use an additional preamplifier, which at the same time enables full
exchangeability between sensor, controller and cable.
It added that some projects touting the future
exchangeability of crypto-tokens may be outright scams.
The
exchangeability and automatic substitution of re-IFX with bio-IFX is debated, and in Europe the decision is entrusted to a single country (8).
Significantly, whereas in Harry Heathcote of Gangoil and in "Catherine Carmichael" Trollope points to analogies between the English and Australian societies, so that even class conflicts in these texts "underscore in fact the superficiality, the ultimate
exchangeability, of all the [social] conflicts" and "reveal that [social] formations are textually postulated and constructed" (Birns 1996: 11-12), John Caldigate seems to underscore the differences between Australia and England.
Seneca's insights apply to Paul's letters: the collection for Jerusalem evinces the reciprocal
exchangeability of material and symbolic goods (Rom.