This puzzled me. I'm pretty sure it's one of those unsolvable questions, but I'd want to know if it's not. Two members of the species Homo Economus, A and B, live next to each other. A wants to buy an easement (a right to cross B's property, without which he...
This is an idea that just occurred to me. We have a large community of people who think about scientific problems recreationally, many of whom are in no position to go around investigating them. Hopefully, however, some other community members are in a position to go around investigating them, or...
[This is a draft intended to be developed into a top-level post - it wouldn't feel wrong to make it such right now, but it wouldn't quite feel right. I am not entirely sure how to end it or if I could generalize better at the end. I kind of...
I'm planning a top-level post (probably two or three or more) on when agent utility should not be part of utilitarian calculations - which seems to be an interesting and controversial topic given some recent posts. I'm looking for additional ideas, and particularly counterarguments. Also hunting for article titles. The...
There are few places where society values rational, objective decision making as much as it values it in judges. While there is a rather cynical discipline called legal realism that says the law is really based on quirks of individual psychology, "what the judge had for breakfast," there's a broad...
From the NYTimes. The central point: > Humans, he argues, are hard-wired to reject scientific conclusions that run counter to their instinctive belief that someone or something is out to get them.
[This is from a very neat example my real analysis professor used some years ago. While I'm fairly confident it's neat, I'm not certain it's top-level-post-worthy. The general point is about problems with applying concepts involving infinity to reality; any advice on content (or formatting!) would be greatly welcomed. My...