Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol

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About F. E. Guerra-Pujol

When I’m not blogging, I am a business law professor at the University of Central Florida.

Cars kill more people than guns

Claudia Dreifus, a writer for the NY Times, recently interviewed Edward Humes, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. The subject of the interview is Humes’s latest book (pictured below) on the deadly dangers of automobiles. The book is titled “Door to Door: The Magnificent, Maddening, Mysterious … Continue reading

Posted in Bayesian Reasoning, Ethics, Law, Probability | 4 Comments

Simple Explanation of the Monty Hall Problem

This is the simplest and fastest explanation of the Monty Hall Problem we have ever seen.

Posted in Bayesian Reasoning, Games, Probability | 4 Comments

Tweets as novels

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

One-dimensional circle chess

Posted in Games, Rules | Leave a comment

Amazon’s first hire

Via kottke, we learned that the first person Jeff Bezos ever hired at Amazon was Shel Kaphan. In this illuminating interview in The Macro, Kaphan describes his first meeting with Bezos and the early days of Amazon.com. Here is an excerpt: … Continue reading

Posted in Bayesian Reasoning, Economics, History, Questions Rarely Asked | 1 Comment

Visualization of mathematics

Posted in Mathematics | 2 Comments

Necessity as a conjecture (post 5 of 5)

In our previous post (9/6), we referred to the work of legal scholar Giorgio Agamben, and we presented our own pragmatic or “common sense” view of the doctrine of necessity: necessity as a safety valve or gap-filling device for unforeseeable or … Continue reading

Posted in Ethics, Law, Philosophy | 1 Comment

Necessity: a third view

Note: this is the fourth of five posts on the doctrine of necessity. In our previous posts (9/1, 9/4, and 9/5), we referred to the work of legal scholar Giorgio Agamben (in particular, his beautiful book State of Exception), and … Continue reading

Posted in Ethics, Law, Philosophy | 2 Comments

Necessity as a source of law

Note: this is the third of five posts on the law and morality of necessity. My wife and I have been watching season 2 of Narcos on Netflix this Labor Day weekend. Narcos revolves mostly around Pablo Escobar, a notorious … Continue reading

Posted in Ethics, Law, Philosophy | 4 Comments

Necessity as an ex post exception

Note: this is the second in a series of five posts on the common law doctrine of necessity. In our previous post (9/1), we presented three general theories of the legal doctrine of necessity. Here, we consider the first of … Continue reading

Posted in Ethics, Law, Philosophy, Uncategorized | 1 Comment