Nothing can have value without being an object of utility.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
What my work is about is, 'Can something that is not an inanimate object be considered valuable?'
Money has no utility to me beyond a certain point.
The meaning or value of a thing consists of what it affords.
There is no such thing as Something for nothing.
If we give something value, it becomes valuable.
Nothing that has value, real value, has no cost. Not freedom, not food, not shelter, not healthcare.
All fine architectural values are human values, else not valuable.
A value is valuable when the value of value is valuable to oneself.
It has not been for nothing that the word has remained man's principal toy and tool: without the meanings and values it sustains, all man's other tools would be worthless.
Nothing is intrinsically valuable; the value of everything is attributed to it, assigned to it from outside the thing itself, by people.