Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
TikTok Tuesday: the ones we left behind
@bigozmusic Innocent girl begs for help in Afghanistan 🇦🇫 💔 #afghan #kabulbleeds #afghanistan #sad #fyp ♬ original sound – BIG OZ
What is the purpose of higher ed?
Aside from status signalling, of course? According to this essay by Agnes Callard, “a university is a place where people help each other access the highest intellectual goods. A university is a place of heterodidacticism.” Robin Hanson, however, replies to … Continue reading
Why does my university want me dead?
Despite my repeated and public protests (see here, for example), I am scheduled to teach five in person sections (with up to 200 students per section) in the same small crowded classroom! To make matters worse, three of those sections … Continue reading
Joe Biden is our Neville Chamberlain
Originally posted on prior probability:
Although it was Trump people’s who negotiated the now-infamous withdrawal deal with representatives of the Taliban last year (see picture below, right), Joe Biden’s incompetent implementation of this illicit agreement, his continued prevarications (see here),…
Happy Birthday, Scientific American
Scientific American published its very first issue on this day (Aug. 28) in 1845. But what does it mean to think in “scientific” terms? To me, it means thinking in terms of probabilities and degrees of belief, not moral certainties, … Continue reading
Could Gambling Save Democracy?
With apologies to my colleague and friend Robin Hanson, that is the tentative title of my next project, which builds on my previous work “Betting on Conspiracies,” which is forthcoming in The Journal of Law & Public Policy. By way … Continue reading
Throwback Thursday: Bargaining and Betrayal in Breaking Bad
While we are on the subject of pedagogical papers (see my previous post), I thought I would share a link to my previous teaching note, “So Long Suckers: Bargaining and Betrayal in Breaking Bad,” which is available here via SSRN. … Continue reading
Teaching Tiger King: final edits
Kudos to my past and present teaching assistants–Christiana Champnella, Benjamin Mayo, Morgan Travers, and Antonella Vitulli–and to Michael McMahon and the editors of the St Louis University Law Review. Our pedagogical paper “Teaching Tiger King“–the final draft of which is … Continue reading
Today is Paris Liberation Day
Originally posted on prior probability:
(And my birthday!) On this day in 1944 the Allies liberated Paris from the Nazis, a major victory and symbolic turning point in the Second World War. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=RUz2XvgaIEo

