Feast Days of the Christmas Octave

Hat tip: @ccpecknold
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A rumble in the Twitter jungle

With apologies to Deborah Mayo (@learnfromerror), this is what happens when you combine Twitter with a bout of insomnia: a tweet at 3:51 AM! In any case, here is the entire thread for your reference …

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Visualization of the Marshall Plan

Hat tip: u/polite-warmonger
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Happy Boxing Day!

Check out this explanation of Boxing Day by Jonathan Thompson. For my part, I like to think of Boxing Day as a “Reverse Nochebuena” because in Latin America we celebrate the Christmas holiday with a big extended family dinner on the 24th instead of the 26th.

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K-Pop Christmas 유희열의 스케치북

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COVID-1984?

Hat tip: @RussellOkung
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Madonna and Child by Ambrogio Lorenzetti (circa 1319)

More details here, via Angela McCarthy (University of Notre Dame Australia).
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La Nochebuena

I first stumbled upon this Lego Nativity Set on 24 December 2016, so why not post it again here on Nochebuena (Christmas Eve)?

F. E. Guerra-Pujol's avatarprior probability

image Feliz Navidad

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Map art (Sol LeWitt/Matt Miller edition)

Forty years ago Sol LeWitt created a piece of art called “The Area of Manhattan Between the Places I Have Lived Is Removed” in which he cut out the geographical area between all the places he had lived in New York City, superimposed on a satellite image of NYC. Fast forward to 2020 and check out this app on Glitch by Matt Miller, which allows you to make your own Sol LeWitt-style map. (Hat tip: @kottke.) For your reference, here is my “Between the Places” map from when I lived in San Juan, Puerto Rico from 1993 to 2009:

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End of year review: 2020

Compared to last year, I slowed down my scholarly production somewhat. In addition to my regular teaching duties, I published a full-length law review article in the Chapman Law Review on Guaranteed Income: Chronicle of a Political Death Foretold and wrote up a new academic paper on Adam Smith in Love, which is under review at the Econ Journal Watch. In addition, I authored two substantive book reviews, one titled “Cowen’s Capitalist Manifesto“, a review of the paperback edition of Tyler Cowen’s love letter to big business; the other on “Frank Ramsey’s Contributions to Probability Theory and Legal Theory“, a review of Cheryl Misak’s intellectual biography of the English polymath.

Lastly, and perhaps leastly, two additional mid-year scholarly contributions of mine were inspired by the current pandemic: Lockdowns as Takings, a mostly normative paper in which I explain why “non-essential” business owners are entitled to just compensation under the Takings Clause instead of meager scraps of PPP loans under the wasteful CARES Act, and Teaching Tiger King, to be published in the St Louis University Law Journal next year, in which I explain how I used the hit Netflix show “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem, and Madness” to teach business law in an online format.

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