Is Math Liberal?
I found this article as a post on a LinkedIn group of a certain "High IQ" society of which I am a member. I had my fun arguing with the libs that the suggestion that the right balance of slavery and freedom is not optimal, but I'd like to hear the Gulch's take on the article.
Cheers,
Max
Cheers,
Max
No truer words were ever written, although not in the way this writer thinks. Ellenberg offers no empirical support for his hypothesis that prosperity versus "Swedishness" is nonlinear. The US experience offers confirmation that it is linear. Its best economic performance came during the Industrial Revolution (in terms of GDP and income growth), which is also the point that the US economy was freest. Other examples of outstanding economic performance under low tax and low regulation regimes are West Germany, Japan, and Hong Kong after World War II. Examples of economic decline after increased governmental involvement in the economy, including higher taxes and more regulation, are legion. Sweden itself has backed away from its own "Swedishness" the last few years as its economy sputtered.
Mathematical thinking is one facet of logical thinking, which requires looking at the evidence. Ellenberg simply makes an assertion of nonlinearity without citing supporting evidence and calls it mathematical thinking, which it is not. However, assertions without evidence are a hallmark of modern liberals (gun control reduces crime, redistribution reduces poverty, regulation benefits "consumers" and so on), so Ellenberg's "mathetical thinking" is indeed "a broadly liberal style of thinking."
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Actually, during the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, America was not operating on free market capitalism, but rather was operating on mercantilism.
I'm sure it seems quite acceptable to so many of our politicians that believe deficit spending is good economics...
Regards,
O.A.
They even look to numerous forms of matching other people's lives to simplified math problems to get their results to set up their next sets of human experimentation.
Emergencies for a 100 years have been officially declared, alphabet soup agencies were created and many of those same emergencies and agencies still exist today.
You said, "one might make an argument that there are no ethics in emergencies." A lot of politicians and their cronies use that to grow and grow and grow their power, and shrink ours.
http://hallingblog.com/austerity-why-it-...