extensive property
(noun)
Any characteristic of matter that depends on the amount of matter being measured.
Examples of extensive property in the following topics:
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Physical and Chemical Properties of Matter
- Properties of matter can be classified as either extensive or intensive and as either physical or chemical.
- All properties of matter are either extensive or intensive and either physical or chemical.
- Both extensive and intensive properties are physical properties, which means they can be measured without changing the substance's chemical identity.
- Mass and volume are both examples of extensive physical properties.
- Recognize the difference between physical and chemical, and intensive and extensive, properties
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Introduction to Property Rights
- In addition to private property, rights there are also public property rights and common property rights.
- Labour is the justification for property.
- A pragmatic justification of property rights is based on defining property rights to achieve an objective.
- "Where the law of property is concerned, it is not difficult to see that the simple rules which are adequate to ordinary mobile "things" or "chattel" are not suitable for indefinite extension.
- I am thinking here of the extension of property to such rights and privileges as patents for inventions, copyright, trademarks, and the like.
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Women and the Law
- She could not conduct business or buy and sell property.
- The Married Women's Property Act of 1839 was an Act of Statute in the state of Mississippi that significantly altered the law regarding property rights granted to married women, allowing them to own and control their own property.
- The Married Women's Property Act of 1848 was a Statute in New York State.
- While other states such as Mississippi had already passed the Married Women's Property Act, the 1848 New York state law was more extensive.
- Women's property rights were again extended in 1860.
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Issues In Property Rights
- As Hayek has pointed out, property rights cannot be static; the property rights that apply to chattel property of individuals may not apply equally well to intellectual property.
- The nature of property rights is a major concern for modern society.
- Lawrence Lessig argues that property rights must be balanced between provision of incentives and to allow others to use intellectual property to extend knowledge.
- A free culture, like a free market, is filled with property.
- And not only were the rights that ran with that property powerful and extensive.
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Digital Media and Intellectual Property Issues
- To protect their intellectual property both offline and online, businesses that rely heavily on copyright protection laws have advocated the extension and expansion of copyrights to the digital space.
- Copyleft and free software activists have criticized the implied analogy of digital property with physical property such as land or cars.
- These critics also argue that the public interest is harmed by ever expansive monopolies in the form of copyright extensions, software patents, and business method patents.
- Some libertarian critics of intellectual property have argued that allowing property rights in ideas and information creates artificial scarcity and infringes on the right to own tangible property.
- Examine how digital media and computer network technologies have reshaped intellectual property issues
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Basic properties of point estimates
- While we could also quantify the standard error for other estimates – such as the median, standard deviation, or any other number of statistics – we will postpone these extensions until later chapters or courses.
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Background and Properties
- If these same functional groups are attached to an acyl group (RCO–) their properties are substantially changed, and they are designated as carboxylic acid derivatives.
- As noted earlier, the relatively high boiling point of carboxylic acids is due to extensive hydrogen bonded dimerization.
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Capitalism
- Economists usually focus on the degree that government does not have control over markets (laissez-faire economics), and on property rights.
- Most political economists emphasize private property, power relations, wage labor, class and capitalism's as a unique historical formation.
- The differing extents to which different markets are free, as well as the rules defining private property, are a matter of politics and policy, and many states have what are termed mixed economies.
- Hernando de Soto is a contemporary economist who has argued that an important characteristic of capitalism is the functioning state protection of property rights in a formal property system where ownership and transactions are clearly recorded.
- The extension of universal adult male suffrage in 19th century Britain occurred along with the development of industrial capitalism, and democracy became widespread at the same time as capitalism, leading many theorists to posit a causal relationship between them—claiming each affects the other.
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Introduction to Circles
- The equation for a circle is just an extension of the distance formula.
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Coloring Agents
- The electronic configuration of some metal complexes gives them important properties, such as color in coordination compounds.
- Many of the properties of metal complexes are dictated by their electronic structures.
- Chemists tend to employ the simplest model required to predict the properties of interest.
- Since the nature of the ligands and the metal can be tuned extensively, a variety of colors can be obtained.