Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
Victims of Communism Day
Although 7 November is the official “Victims of Communism Memorial Day” (see here), why not May Day instead?
View from the wing (April 2023)
Below is a gallery of some window-seat snapshots of my travels from Orlando to DC to Santa Barbara.
My contribution the 1898 exhibition
In my previous post, I mentioned that my wife and I were able to attend the opening of a special exhibition on “1898: U.S. Imperial Visions and Revisions” at the National Portrait Gallery. Here, I will highlight my contribution to … Continue reading
Postcards from D.C.
We are in our nation’s capital to attend the opening of a special exhibition on “1898: U.S. Imperial Visions and Revisions” at the National Portrait Gallery. I will blog about this excellent exhibition in the next day or two.
Die Adam Smith Probleme
That is the plural of Das Adam Smith Problem as well as the title of my most recent work-in-progress, which I have posted to SSRN (see here). In honor of David Hilbert, the abstract of my paper contains just 23 … Continue reading
Coase’s parable update
I have posted a revised draft of my most recent paper “COASE’S PARABLE” to SSRN. This paper, which traces the intellectual origins of the late Ronald Coase’s “reciprocal harms” idea (an idea with radical moral, political, and legal implications that … Continue reading
Travel time
Yesterday was the last day of the spring semester at my home institution, and starting tomorrow my wife and I will be visiting a number of places over the next two weeks, including Las Vegas, Nevada (to celebrate our 11th … Continue reading
A postscript to the Adam Smith-David Hume incident
My previous posts assembled, surveyed, and subjected to lawyerly scrutiny the three different versions of “The Adam Smith-David Hume Incident at Oxford” that appear in the historical record — the 1797 version of this storied anecdote attributed to Sir John … Continue reading
The Adam Smith-David Hume Incident: Strang’s fable
Alternative Title: The Anecdote (Part 3 of 3) Nineteenth century Scottish author, historian, and statistician John Strang surveys the founding and subsequent history of two of Glasgow’s most illustrious private societies in chapter 1 of his most important work Glasgow … Continue reading

