Guerilla I think you may just be struggling with what "value" means in a business context.
I know what value means. The greatest economist of the 20th century, Ludwig von Mises wrote "Human Action" which is 881 pages (pocket edition) to detail exactly what value is, and how it is applicable to the study of human activity.
It is the only book I keep on my desk at all times, mostly as a reminder never to forget the fundamentals of why man acts.
Your position is that value is subjective, but it is not subjective in business.
Any time humans are involved, value is subjective. That's not an opinion, it is a fact. No two humans value anything exactly the same. Using a methodology, even if it produces the same result for you and I, still doesn't mean we both value that conclusion the same.
If businesses had an objective valuation method, then we wouldn't need markets because there would be no arbitrage (all values are equal between actors; knowable). That is epistemically impossible.
This stuff is so simple, but like many things we debate, you don't have a foundation in understanding why, and so like to repeat what what what over and again. Whether it is something you believe, or heard, or read or were taught, you don't reason from first principles because you don't seem to have any first principles of economic or social thought.
That's not an insult, but it is I think, fairly accurate. All of your positions are ad hoc, and in many cases, contradictory. On the one hand, you say you understand Ron Paul's economics, then you take positions against the very core of Ron Paul's economic understanding. Either you're lying, or you're confused, and while I don't think a lot of your character, I prefer not to think you're lying, hence why I keep replying to you.
I am honestly hoping (probably along with half of the intelligent people on this forum) that you have an epiphany one day, and it all falls into place for you. A rational approach to human interaction.
To any investor worth a damn, values are not subjective.
That's your opinion, not a fact. You have to separate the two. Despite how smart we may think we are, our opinions and values aren't synonymous with objective reality.
I really don't know how much clearer to make it so hopefully that explanation helps. Maybe you're just coming at this from an individual person's perception rather than what the actual value of the business is. I dunno.
Methodological individualism. Firms are simply abstractions. Any grouping is an abstraction at the end of the day. Whether it is a firm, a corporation, a government, a council or a church. At the end of the day, only individual humans can act. These abstractions cannot act independent of the individual humans which comprise them.