Intrinsic vs. instrumental value

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Teo Ajantaival (+34/-34) Associated terminal value with intrinsic value, because previously it was mistakenly associated with instrumental value.
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Intrinsic value (sometimes called terminal value) is the value something has for its own sake. Instrumental value, by contrast, is the value something has by virtue of its effects on other things.

Further reading

Zimmerman, Michael J. (2002) Intrinsic vs. extrinsic value, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, October 22 (updated 9 January 2019).

Intrinsic value (sometimes called terminal value) is the value something has for its own sake. Instrumental value (sometimes called terminal value) is the value something has by virtue of its effects on other things.

Intrinsic value is the value something has for its own sake. Instrumental value (sometimes called terminal value) is the value something has by virtue of its effects on other things.