Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
Flagging the flaggers!?
Last night, during another bout of insomnia, I opened YouTube and poked around that glorious site. At one point, YouTube’s secret algorithms enticed me with this one-hour lecture by Professor Josiah Thompson, a first-generation JFK assassination researcher whose 1967 book … Continue reading
It’s Black History Month!
Here are some of my previous black history posts: 2014, 2015a, 2015b, 2017, and 2021.
Future adventures in ChatGPT
Thus far, I have used ChatGPT to explore the research questions posed in seven of my previous papers. Below are ten additional research problems from my previous work that I may (or may not) feed into ChatGPT in the days … Continue reading
Adventures in ChatGPT: Do grasshoppers dream of impartial spectators?
Why doesn’t ChatGPT have a sense of humor? Last year, I posted an essay titled “Do Grasshoppers Dream of Impartial Spectators?”, where I review two books: Our Great Purpose: Adam Smith on Living a Better Life by Ryan Patrick Hanley … Continue reading
More Adventures in ChatGPT: Judge Hercules versus Judge Bayes
In a previous post, I pointed out seven of my scholarly papers that contain a question in their titles, and last week, I fed five of those questions into ChatGPT and shared the results of these AI adventures on this … Continue reading
Review of Chapter 2 of Rule of Law
I won’t have much to say about Chapter 2 of Tom Bingham’s book Rule of Law (available here), which surveys several “historical milestones” in Anglo-American legal history, beginning with the Magna Carta of 1215 and concluding with the Universal Declaration … Continue reading
ChatGPT: Why don’t juries use range voting?
Back in 2015 I published a paper with the title “Why don’t juries try range voting?” In brief, range voting, also known as score voting, is a voting method in which voters give a score or rank to each candidate … Continue reading
ChatGPT, the Prisoner’s Dilemma, and the Coase Theorem
The Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Coase Theorem are two widely-cited ideas in economics and law. As it happens, one of my papers is titled “Does the Prisoner’s Dilemma Refute the Coase Theorem?,” which I co-wrote with my colleague and friend … Continue reading

