Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
¡Que tengas un verano estupendo!
Translation: Have a great summer! Below are two melodious classics to officially kick off the summer season:
John List on critical thinking in the age of A.I.
I want to conclude (for now) my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” with an insight from my colleague and friend John A. List (a/k/a @Econ_4_Everyone), an experimental economist at the University of Chicago. When asked, What … Continue reading
Critical thinking as a communal activity
N.B.: This is Part 5 of my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” Yesterday (see here), I responded to John McPeck’s critique that there are no general thinking skills; today, I will respond to the other objections … Continue reading
ChatGPT’s pincer attack on critical thinking
N.B.: This is Part 4 of my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” In my previous post, I turned to David Hitchcock’s survey article in the SEP to revisit several salient critiques of the theory, pedagogy, and … Continue reading
Critiques of *critical thinking* theory, pedagogy, and practice: an annotated bibliography
N.B.: This is Part 3 of my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” As I mentioned in my previous post, critical thinking is supposed to help us overcome our biases, but is my own approach to critical … Continue reading
What is *critical thinking*? A Humean-Bayesian approach
N.B.: This is Part 2 of my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” Previously (see here), I posed a question that has been troubling me since ChatGPT was unleashed on the world on 30 November 2022: What … Continue reading
La Bikina
As I remember my late father, Don Francisco Guerra (1943-2024), on this Father’s Day, I say “hasta pronto y hasta luego” to our beloved México with our favorite mariachi ballad, for it was my Cuban father who introduced me to … Continue reading
*Retrodiction Markets*
That is the title of my most recent published paper, which appears on pages 316-331 of Volume 18 of the Journal of Law & Public Policy (JLPP). In brief, I build on F. A. Hayek’s classic work “The use of … Continue reading
Domestic Constitutional Violence: Los Angeles
Update #2 (14 June): An appellate court has put a temporary pause on Judge Breyer’s grandiloquent order (see previous update below) and scheduled an emergency hearing for this Tuesday, 17 June (see here). Update (13 June): Charles Breyer, an unelected … Continue reading
The day the music died: 11 June 2025
I will resume my series on “Critical thinking in the age of A.I.” in the next day or two; in the meantime, I want to hit pause to honor the life and legacy of my fellow Californian Brian Wilson, the … Continue reading

