Stephen Hicks, Ph.D.

Philosopher

Worth Reading for November 2007

11/30 Why were Enron’s Ken Lay and Jeff Skilling convicted? Professor Larry Ribstein argues that no one seems to know for sure.

11/29 Eyal Mozes investigates: Is there a rational basis for determinism? And in Spiked, Stuart Derbyshire surveys the state of brain science and free will and argues that we’re no slaves of our senses.

11/28 The New York Times reports on further progress for women in India. (Thanks to Virginia for the link.)
Prospect magazine has this fascinating overview (statist assumptions aside) of India’s under-achieving middle class. Philosopher Stone has a post with links about India and Ayn Rand. And thanks to my friend Bill, I’ve been watching Bollywood movies this year—let me recommend Guru (“a villager, Gurukant Desai, arrives in Bombay 1958, and rises from its streets to become the GURU, the biggest tycoon in Indian history”), Lagaan (“the people of a small village in Victorian India stake their future on a game of cricket against their ruthless British rulers”), and Veer-Zaara (“the story of the love between Veer Pratap Singh, an Indian, and Zaara Hayaat Khan, a Pakistani”).

11/27 A sad case study in far-left educational culture: Charlotte Allen explains Who killed Antioch College. (Thanks to Charles for the link.) On financial accountability in higher education: Ward Connerly looks at the factors. And Yale professor Anthony Kronman reminds those of us in higher education Why We Are Here.

11/26 A brief look at the social skills of the new generation of entrepreneurs. Here is an overview of Dietrich Doerner’s work on failure. The BusinessPundit on the one book every executive should read. And some useful advice to young entrepreneurs from a young entrepreneur.

11/20 Three interesting conferences coming up next April: Objectivity in the Law at the University of Texas, Liberty Studies at the College of New Jersey, and the annual conference of the Association of Private Enterprise Education in Las Vegas. Update: And in February a Students for Liberty conference at Columbia University, featuring speakers David Boaz of Cato, Alan Kors of the University of Pennsylvania, and Will Thomas of The Atlas Society.

11/19 It’s getting better all the time. Graphically-presented data on average income in the USA along with several other progress-related charts and graphs. Here is a website devoted to improvement indicators. (Thanks to Anja for the link.) And why even the optimistic Star Trek series underestimates future potential.

11/17 Professor Tara Smith investigates: Why Originalism Won’t Die—Common Mistakes in Competing Theories of Judicial Interpretation. (Thanks to Richard for the link.)

11/16 “In 1993, over a million saiga antelopes roamed the steppes of Russia and Kazakhstan. Today, fewer than 30,000 remain, most of them females.” Unintended consequences meet the tragedy of the commons, as Tyler Cowen explains.

11/12 Sawse has twenty-five photographs taken at precisely the right time.

11/11 Reflecting on Kurt Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle, Lester Hunt makes some shrewd observations about the moral psychology of cynicism, socialism, and nihilism. And John Palmer, the EclectEcon, has a datum on the European left’s deep crisis.

11/10 The bedbugs are back. Yet another thing to thank Rachel Carson for. Or not.

11/8 This Friday’s Free Kareem rallies. And while a relatively liberal young man languishes in jail, here is a classic piece explaining the attraction of intellectual-lightweight entertainment superstars to heavyweight-murderous political thugs: Humberto Fontova considers the case of Che.

11/7 In The New York Times, Harvard economist Greg Mankiw has a closer look at health care comparison numbers. Johan Norberg is also looking at the number of uninsured Americans. Philosopher Stone has a good round-up of links on the economics and politics of healthcare. Meanwhile, John Enright wonders what life-saving information we should suppress next. And Tom Kirkendell reminds us of an important anniversary: 30 years of angioplasty.

11/6 Overcoming the destructive eras in our history. An important history lesson by Shelby Steele on the legacy of Little Rock. Some pictorial evidence relevant to the question: to what extent were the Nazis Christian? And here’s an essay on the Regressives—or rather, the so-called Progressives in American history. Professor David Mayer has also written wisely on the reactionary progressives.

11/5 Laocoön Art historian Lynn Catterson speculates on the Laocoön scuplture: Hellenistic masterpiece or Michelangelo’s brilliant ploy? More on the hypothesis here—though would “forgery” be the right word? Meanwhile, classicist Mary Beard plays hooky to visit the Laocoön exhibition in Rome.

11/4 Cato’s David Boaz argues that on balance we are freer than at many points in our past (PDF format). Here is a stellar line-up of back issues of Cato’s Letter. By contrast, it’s election year in Saskatchewan, the resource-rich and socialism-poor Canadian province. The contrast to its neighbor Alberta is instructive. And even worse: Meghan Cox Gurdon puts some of our domestic rhetoric in perspective.

11/3 Where is Voltaire when you need him? John Leo wonders who will stand up for free speech on campus. Here is one university committed to brainwashing students with false and destructive messages. (Thanks to Johann for the link.) And David Thompson comments on the right not to be offended. Update: The FIRE reports that the University of Delaware has dropped its obnoxious indoctrination plans.

11/2 Ayn Rand in Latin America, with these follow-up interviews with Alex Chafuen, Giancarlo Ibargüen, and Juan Fernando Carpio. Harry Binswanger’s useful The Ayn Rand Lexicon is now free online. (Thanks to Anja for the link.) And YouTube user DJ Lorenzen has Ayn Rand on audio.

11/1 Trends of the times: A short interview in The Globe and Mail with the always-observant Grant McCracken, a summary look at IRS tax data, more data on badly misplaced priorities in the drug war and the fight against crime (thanks to Virginia for the link), and evidence that being a cop just keeps getting more difficult.

Posted 4 years, 2 months ago at 12:00 am.

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Worth Reading for February 2007

2/28 It’s never too soon to get excited about the next Olympic Games: Beijing 2008. And has the 2007 Wimbledon tennis tournament rejected the labor theory of value?

2/27 Causality and concept-formation: the case of breast cancer. (Via Arts & Letters Daily.) And here is evidence of higher intelligence: chimpanzees making and using tools and weapons. (Thanks to Joe H. for the link.)

2/26 Aside from a few pathetic Freudian snarks, here’s a good survey of the current worldwide skyscraper boom. And here are some photos of skyscrapers finished and under construction.

2/24 I love photos of great cities. Here is Times Square at night. And while few of these are to my taste, here is a Forbes feature on the world’s most expensive homes.

2/22 Reforming statist higher education: Greek universities take a step toward more autonomy and privatization. (Via University Diaries.) And here is a success story of the founding of a private university: Stanford University.

2/21 Sarcasm alert: Russell Roberts admits it: “I’m a hack.” And at the very fine Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, here are Stanley Lebergott’s article on “Wages and Working Conditions” in the 20th century and Linda Gorman’s article on “Minimum Wages.”

2/20 Yogi Berra said of a popular restaurant, “Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded.” Patrick Henry did not say, “Give me liberty, or give me death!” And Zsa Zsa Gabor, asked how many husbands she has had, said, “You mean apart from my own?” Louis Menand reflects on quotes and the quotable.

2/19 At TED, Richard St. John has a short and sweet 3:46 minute video on what leads to success. And at The Atlasphere, Bob Burg has good advice on Bringing Your Business to the Next Level.

2/16 Peter Oborne launches a good discussion on Nick Cohen’s new book, which asks how the “liberal-left has lost its way and, in the process, turned a blind eye to Islamic fascism.” David Thompson reflects on an unsatisfactory conversation with some have-it-both-ways lefty multiculturalists. And at Sign and Sight, Pascal Bruckner defends the Enlightenment project and puts the choice starkly: “Enlightenment fundamentalism or racism of the anti-racists?”

2/15 Liberty in Spanish: Fundacion Atlas’s heroes of liberty. Here is The New Individualist’s excellent interview with Eduardo Marty, who is president of Argentina’s Junior Achievement and a director of Fundacion Atlas.

2/13 Business and management guru David Maister has straight talk on how to manage your career. This prompted a series of strong reader reactions and a response by Maister about the role of Ayn Rand’s philosophy in his thinking.

2/12 Fathers, sons, and adventure: The Dangerous Book for Boys is selling strongly and being well-reviewed in Britain.

2/10 Two good analyses of dishonest squashing of dissent: Robert Bidinotto on ad hominem smearing and Frank Furedi on guilt-by-dubious-association. And Russell Roberts weighs in on why he thinks the global-warming-doomsayers will get at most a few token policy changes.

2/9 I’m late to the show, but I watched The Commanding Heights, a very good three-DVD series on the economic history of the twentieth century. The first disk nicely engages the great intellectual battle of Hayek and Friedman against Keynes and connects that battle to the political achievements of Reagan and Thatcher against their socialist and mixed economy enemies. Here is the resource-rich website for the program.

2/8 Philosophy 101 reports: a student sues a college for his own poor typing skills. And check in again with Walter Olson for the latest zaniness from the world of crazy lawsuits. And for a fun test case: If the state’s interest in preserving marriage is to promote procreation, then these gay activists have a good point.

2/7 Roy Poses of Healthcare Renewal quotes extensively from The Boston Globe’s article on allegedly lavish spending by the leadership of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. Lavish on limousines and fancy dinners in Manhattan, Paris, and London, that is.

2/6 A -13F degree morning is a good time to survey the terribly politicized reporting of climate science: Peter Cresswell links to and summarizes this Fraser Institute Independent Summary for Policymakers;
The Wall Street Journal provides an overview of the highly-variable scientific climate of opinion; Johan Norberg points out several big items from the IPCC report that shouldn’t be overlooked; Glenn Reynolds sketches his thoughts on several global- warming-related issues; and Division of Labour excerpts George Will’s list of six key questions about climate change.

2/5 American politicians who want government to control our wealth, manage our investments, and set our wages: Philosopher Stone quotes a politician who straightforwardly says “I want to take those profits,” and Joe Krutulis writes a letter to Indiana politicians about why they shouldn’t make it harder for his teenage daughter to get a job.

2/3 FIRE has announced its speech code of the month: Northeastern University. And here is a confession of intellectual bankruptcy: We can’t out-argue or out-market bigoted authoritarianism, so Chris Hedges wants to censor it.

2/2 The Cato Institute has some cool interactive world economic freedom maps. (Via Division of Labour.)

2/1 Cancer rates drop for second year in a row. Global warming blamed. Or something like that. And Flemming Rose and Bjorn Lomborg speak truth to power, finding some inconvenient truths that don’t fit Al Gore’s cherry-picking the global warming data.

Posted 4 years, 11 months ago at 4:53 am.

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