0 at first sight (= based on what seems to be the truth when first seen or heard):
1 based on what seems to be the truth when first seen or heard:
The commission says the report provides prima facie evidence of media racism.
They could only seek the information if there was a prima facie case of fraud to investigate.
Although a prima facie attractive idea, it is easy to think of counter-examples.
Agents bargaining in the same market are prima facie seen as members of a loose, non-integrated dependence network.
This is because it is prima facie wrong to play a role in undermining people's judgment and will.
In these respects there is indeed a prima facie case for design.
And there are good prima facie reasons to hold that they are so challenged.
We note also that the intuition behind the account, though prima facie compelling, seems to suffer counterexamples.
This solution would thus also reject 1 and 2, calling the duties in question prima facie rather than all-things-considered duties.
Properties of the act itself or how it brings about consequences help make it prima facie wrong and nonproportional to many ends.