Sunday song: Fale de mim (Mendel edit)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Some summer readings

In addition to Adam Smith’s Additions and Corrections to the First and Second Editions of Dr. Adam Smith’s Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1784), I have read or will be reading the following books:

  1. Martin Belov (editor), Constitutional Polycrisis and Emergency Constitutionalism (2025). I will be thumbing through this tome to see if my work on Gödel’s loophole (see here and here) is cited; I will report back soon!
  2. Donald J. Braben, Scientific Freedom: The Elixir of Civilization (2020). Is this one of those books that should have been a blog post?
  3. Timothy J. Henderson, A Glorious Defeat: Mexico and Its War with the United States (2007). Talk about revisionist history! The author somehow finds a way of blaming Mexico for instigating the Mexican-American War of 1847.
  4. Roberta Adelaide Modugno, The Legacy of Murray N. Rothbard (2025). Full disclosure: I am on Team Nozick; I am reading this book to fill up a blind spot in my libertarian studies.
  5. Eliana Maria Santanatoglia, An Evolutionary Account of Law: The Role of Evolutionary Thinking in Legal Theory and Philosophy (2026). I have always been fascinated with evolutionary theory (see here, for example), so I am reading this book to compare notes, so to speak, with the author.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Adam Smith’s 1784 pamphlet by the numbers

As I mentioned in my previous post (see here), between the publication of the second and third editions of his Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith published a separate 79-page pamphlet titled Additions and Corrections to the First and Second Editions of Dr. Adam Smith’s Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1784). Smith’s supplement, which is available here, contains 13 separate substantive inserts or additions to the first two editions of The Wealth of Nations. The shortest of these inserts consists of just 39 words, while the longest one contains 40 paragraphs spread across 32 pages, including a single paragraph that spans almost eight full pages! For reference, below is a full breakdown of all 13 additions/inserts in Smith’s 1784 supplement:

  1. Addition #1 = 1 paragraph; 6 sentences (14 lines)
  2. Addition #2 = 2 paragraphs; 7 sentences (20 lines)
  3. Addition #3 = 1 paragraph; 1 sentence (4 lines)
  4. Addition #4 = 1 paragraph; 12 sentences (36 lines)
  5. Addition #5 = 2 paragraphs; 15 sentences (55 lines)
  6. Addition #6 = 9 paragraphs; 37 sentences (121 lines)
  7. Addition #7 = 1 paragraph; 3 sentences (10 lines)
  8. Addition #8 = 4 paragraphs; 18 sentences (73 lines)
  9. Addition #9 = 1 paragraph; 1 sentence (5 lines)
  10. Addition #10 = 2 paragraphs; 5 sentences (17 lines)
  11. Addition #11 = 13 paragraphs, plus two tables, spread across nine pages
  12. Addition #12 = 54 paragraphs spread across 24 pages
  13. Addition #13 = 40 paragraphs spread across 32 pages

Why did Smith make these additions, and what did he have to say? To what extent do these additions reflect what Smith may have learned first-hand as an official Commissioner of Scottish Customs and Salt Duties, a full-time post he had held from February 1778? I will proceed to the substance of these 13 additions starting on Monday, 29 June.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Adam Smith update: June 2026

At the Adam Smith conference in Paris that I attended earlier this month (10 June; see here), historian Emma Rothschild (pictured below, along with the cover of her beautiful 2021 book An Infinite History) brought to my attention the following fact: between the publication of the second and third editions of his Wealth of Nations, the Scottish scholar published a separate 79-page pamphlet titled Additions and Corrections to the First and Second Editions of Dr. Adam Smith’s Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1784). (Smith’s supplement is available here.) Suffice it to say that I have finally got around to reading Smith’s pamphlet, and I will begin describing its contents here in the next or day two.

An Infinite History
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

El Día de San Juan

On this day (24 June) in 1724, Johann Sebastian Bach led the first performance of Christ, unser Herr, zum Jordan kam (BWV 7), the third cantata of his chorale cantata cycle, at St. Nicholas Church in Leipzig. Bach had composed this great work to commemorate Johannistag, the Nativity of John the Baptist, which is celebrated by Christians on this day.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Happy birthdays, Justices Thomas and Sotomayor

Clarence Thomas was born on this day (23 June) in 1948 in the segregated Deep South (Pin Point, Georgia), while Sonia Maria Sotomayor was born on 25 June 1954 in the Bronx, New York, to Puerto Rican parents. Below is a lecture she gave at the University of Alabama in April of this year:

For his part, of the 116 judges who have served on the Supreme Court of the United States, Thomas (the only true originalist on the high court today; see here, for example) is the second longest-serving justice in our nation’s history. Below is a lecture he gave at the University of Texas (Austin) in April of this year:

As an aside, the comments section on one of the two YouTube videos above is shut down. Can you guess which one?

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Cuba’s bankrupt dictatorship discovers Adam Smith

Last week, Cuba’s corrupt Prime Minister Manuel Marrero (see here) proposed a package of free market reforms, including the legalization of private businesses in agriculture and tourism. According to one report, these proposed economic reforms “significantly expand the private sector six decades after Cuba’s communist leaders forbade all private business—even frita stands—and adopted a centrally planned economy model that ended up ruining the country ….” Source: Nora Gámez Torres, Miami Herald (19 June 2026), “Cuba to privatize state companies; opens banking and energy to foreign and private capital.” See also Carlos S. Maldonado, El País (19 June 2026): “Cuba se abre al capitalismo y aprueba su mayor reforma en décadas: banca privada, mercado de cambios y fin de los subsidios.” It’s unclear, however, when these reforms will take effect, and Cuba’s corrupt communist government remains a one-party military dictatorship.

Adam Smith > Karl Marx
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Monday music: Off the wall (album)

According to Wikipedia, Michael Jackson’s “Off the wall” album was released 47 summers ago (on 10 August 1979) by Epic Records and features songwriting contributions from music legends David FosterPaul McCartneyRod Temperton, and Stevie Wonder (among others), as well as three tracks penned by MJ himself:

  • Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” (track #1)
  • Workin’ Day and Night” (track #3)
  • Get on the Floor” (track #4; co-written by MJ & Louis Johnson)
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

In praise of Eric Matson

One of my favorite papers at this year’s Adam Smith conference in Glasgow was Erik W. Matson’s “Minding the Gaps: Reality, Theory, and Policy in Adam Smith”, which will be published in Volume 30 of The Independent Review. In summary, Professor Matson’s thesis is that the The Wealth of Nations exemplifies two eternal gaps in the world of ideas. One is the practical gap between Smith’s economic and political theory (e.g. people should be free to pursue any trade) and public policy (e.g. occupational licensure), which as Matson explains inevitably arises from considerations of political feasibility and the existence of entrenched interest groups. The other is the epistemological gap between reality or the facts we seek to explain and our theories or efforts to explain them. Here is a link to an ungated version Professor Matson’s thoughtful paper.

Mind the Gap — The importance of handoffs to patient satisfaction | by  Frank Cutitta | Medium
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Boteco do Brasil

After a full day of panels at this year’s Adam Smith conference in Glasgow, I will be watching the Group C stage match between Scotland and Morocco at Boteco do Brasil in the Merchant City tonight.

Scotland vs. Morocco—World Cup: Preview, Predictions and Lineups
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments