End of year review: June to December 2023

In a previous post, I reviewed my scholarly comings-and-goings during the first half of 2023; below is the second half of my end-of-year review:

  1. TWO NEW WORKS-IN-PROGRESS: During the summer of 2023 I began writing up two new papers. One of my papers, Die Adam Smith Probleme, was inspired by the many lectures, panels, and workshops I attended at the University of Glasgow in June of this year in honor of Adam Smith’s 300th birthday. At the same time, I was motivated to research and write my other paper, Gödel’s Loophole 2.0, to commemorate the 10-year anniversary of the publication of my most cited and downloaded law review article: Gödel’s Loophole from 2013. (I will have much more to say about both of these pending projects in future blog posts.)
  2. NEW DRAFT OF TRUTH MARKETS. In addition to Gödel’s Loophole 2.0 and Die Adam Smith Probleme, both of which I began writing this past summer (see item #1 above), I revisited a third work-in-progress, my previous paper on truth markets. Starting with the feedback I received from two anonymous referees earlier in the year, I made major revisions to the paper, which I have now rechristened “Speech Markets“. (I will also have more to say about this project soon.)
  3. HISTORY OF ECONOMICS SOCIETY: In June of 2013, I presented my newly-published paper “Coase’s Parable” (available here) at the annual conference of the History of Economics Society (HES), which met in Vancouver on June 23-25, 2023. (Although this conference was in person, I presented my work virtually as I was in Scotland at the time; in any case, I want to take this opportunity to shout out professors Diane Coyle and Steven Medema for their excellent questions and comments.)
  4. THOMISTIC INSTITUTE: In July of 2023, I attended a four-day symposium on “Uncertainty, Confidence, and Truth in the Sciences” at the Thomistic Institute in Washington, D.C. on July 12-16, 2023. Among other things, it was at this symposium that I discovered an excellent book on the history of subjective probability theory, “Degrees of Belief” by Steven G. Vick. (I also got to visit the National Museum of the American Indian during my time in D.C.)
  5. SAN DIEGO: Also in July, I flew out to California to attend the annual conference of the Academy of Legal Studies in Business (ALSB), which met in beautiful San Diego on July 25-29, 2023. (The ALSB is composed of business law professors at the college level, who meet once a year in various places to present papers and share ideas.) For me, the high point of this year’s ALSB conference was the keynote speech by Dr Wendy Patrick (brief bio here) on the “Ethics of Artificial Intelligence.”
  6. REPLY TO BAUDE & PAULSEN: After my trip to San Diego, I began reviewing William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen’s forthcoming law review article “The Force and Sweep of Section Three”, a work that was being cited by many mainstream political pundits in support of disqualifying Donald Trump from the ballot. Among other things, I posted a multi-part review of their article over several days on this blog (August-September), converted my blog posts into a formal essay titled “The Limited Sweep and Ineffectual Force of False Analogies“, and posted my reply essay to SSRN on Sept. 14.
  7. PEPSI POINTS CASE: Also in September (Sept. 22), I spoke at a panel on the Pepsi Points case at the Dwayne O. Andreas Law School in Orlando, Florida, a leading reward offer case (and the subject of an entertaining Netflix documentary) that I argued was wrongly decided on procedural grounds, and I attended a fun two-day conference on “Teaching and Learning with A.I.” at my home institution, the University of Central Florida (Sept. 24-25).
  8. HOLMES : In October, I was invited to contribute to an episode of “Books that Shaped America” on C-SPAN. The episode, which first aired on Oct. 16, was devoted to the classic book The Common Law by the great North American jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes. Later that month (Oct. 27), I spoke about the life and legacy of Holmes at a meeting of the student chapter of the American Constitution Society (ACS) at the Dwayne O. Andreas Law School, along with my former colleagues Seema Mohapatra (SMU), Michael Morley (FSU), and Dan O’Gorman (Barry).
  9. FALL CONFERENCES: In November, I presented parts of my works-in-progress (see items #1 and #2 above) at the fall symposium of the Journal of Law & Public Policy or JLPP at the University of Saint Thomas in Minneapolis (Nov. 17), where I had the honor of meeting Nadine Strossen as well as Professor Charles Reid in person, and at the annual Constitutional Law Colloquium at Loyola University in Chicago a week earlier (Nov. 10-11).
  10. GODEL PREQUEL: Most recently, I have been rewriting and revising an old work of mine titled Gödel’s Interbellum, a kind of “prequel” to my 2013 paper Gödel’s Loophole. (I will be presenting this new/old paper at a conference in January 2024, so I will have more to say about it next month.)
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June to December
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About F. E. Guerra-Pujol

When I’m not blogging, I am a business law professor at the University of Central Florida.
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