Hey Old_Dick,
I agree with your points about value. As I have stated in this thread, I too value the silver print over the inkjet print, I'm just not entirely sure of my reasoning beyond learned bias. I do think that it can be hard to make an inkjet print of great quality - there is mental effort as well as material testing, etc, that goes on in a manner similar to how materials are tested, etc, in the darkroom. A print, optical or inkjet, has exactly the value that people are willing to pay for it. Currently the edge goes to optical, but that might not hold true forever...or it might.
Regarding getting $1 or $1000 for a print that I might sell, it depends on my motivation for selling. If I was a starving artist I might be willing to sell 10K prints at $1 because I get to eat after selling the first print. If I sell a print for $1K, I still get to eat after selling it but I might have to go hungry between sales. If my desire is to be a Great Artiste, I might hold out for $2500.
I've been to art shows where photographers have silver prints for sale well above $1K. They also offer the same print, usually at a smaller size, in inkjet, for a lot less money. I see that as a practical commercial decision. Their work, and their name, gets out at a lower price point while still retaining the fine art aspect and price of the larger silver print. The inkjet still has value, just not as much, even in the eyes of those artists selling both.
Would Clyde be offended by this? Given that he has moved to digital for aging reasons, would he be offended to hear that his same-sized inkjet prints are worth less than silver? (I don't know if they are or should or should not be.) Maybe he sees less effort in digital and is ok with it. Or, maybe he thinks this attitude devalues his vision as an artist. If his problem is in the field and not in the darkroom, would creating optical prints from digital negatives get back that hand-made quality of the silver print? Or, is it important that the entire workflow be analog in order for the final silver print to have the most value?
I just missed the punch card era by one semester and currently make my living writing embedded software. As you said, the file lasts as long as the technology exists to read it or until all copies have been deleted and their storage locations wiped in a manner that makes recovery impossible. One of the Westons famously destroyed his negatives so that no prints of those are possible. Presumably someone could delete the digital file and truly have a limited number of inkjet prints. I think that controlling the number of prints made is not hard whether digital or analog.
Regards,
Rob