In addition to my many substantive refereed papers, law review articles, and book chapters (see here, for example), I have also authored a small handful of scholarly “micro-papers” over the years, i.e. published works consisting of three paragraphs or less. For reference, my most noteworthy mini-publications are listed in reverse chronological order below:
- Betting on Conspiracies?, Journal of Brief Ideas (July 17, 2021).
- Kant on Evidence: A Hypothetical Reply to Kerr, Green Bag 2d, Vol. 22, No. 4 (Summer, 2019), pp. 281-282.
- Bayesian Judges, Journal of Brief Ideas (December 28, 2019).
- Bayesian Verdicts, Journal of Brief Ideas (March 1, 2018).
- Research Fraud as Tort, Science, Vol. 349, No. 6255 (Sep. 25, 2015), pp. 1459-1460.
- Time-Travel Thought Experiment, Science, Vol. 341, No. 6141 (Jul. 5, 2013), pp. 28-29.
- Is stare decisis a sand castle?, Arizona State Law Journal (Oct. 1, 2012).
- Public Trust Doctrine: Too Broad?, Science, Vol. 326, No. 5949 (Oct. 2, 2009), pp. 45-46.



I have to thank you for making me aware of micropapers. I have even gotten a couple published myself!
hear, hear!!