From a recent deposition of Mr Musk:


From a recent deposition of Mr Musk:


I nominate the small square sign pictured below, which is located on Riverside Drive in Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Either former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie or President Trump’s SCOTUS nominee Amy Coney Barret (or both!) might be a coronavirus “superspreader” and Zeynep Tufecki’s report in The Atlantic: This Overlooked Variable Is the Key to the Pandemic. Hat tip: Salvador Antonetti.

Source: Remember Singapore (10/1)

Built in the 19th century, Jurong Road was the oldest road in the western part of Singapore. According to the Monthly Progress Report by the …
Coming to the End of Jurong Road
Class #6 of my Advanced Topics in Law class will be devoted to the battle of ideas over corporate social responsibility (CSR). To make this intellectual battle as memorable as possible, I have enlisted the late great conservative economist Milton Friedman and the feisty-liberal-law-professor-cum-senator Liz Warren to personify two different approaches to CSR: “greed is good” and “share the wealth.” Also, for your reference, two years ago I wrote up a detailed, 13-part paragraph-by-paragraph review of Milton Friedman’s classic essay “The social responsibility of business is to increase its profits.” Links to my extended review of Friedman’s ideas are below:

Yes, why not? Stupid bastards!!! Check out Matthew Walther’s review of last night’s presidential debate. I missed the debate (#YankeesIndians), but according to Mr Walther, one of the candidates even said, “Stupid bastard.” (Which one!?) Here is just one excerpt from Walther’s excellent essay: “It was like witnessing an argument about an arcane procedural rule during a senior bingo night at a nursing home in purgatory.” Updated (10/1) with Remy’s excellent rap version of the first “presidential” debate.
In honor of Oktoberfest, which actually begins in September(!), check out this cool color-coded map of Germany’s most popular beers by region. (Hat tip: u/tifa365, via Reddit.)

In his classic book The Common Law, the father of legal realism Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. famously said, “The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.” In summary, the Common Law refers to a body of judge-made rules, doctrines, and legal principles. Among other things, this vast and complex body of rules, doctrines, and principles comprises three important areas of private law that are especially relevant to business firms, including Torts, Contracts, and Property. The Law of Contracts, for example, defines which promises are legally-enforceable, and the Law of Torts imposes various legal duties on individuals and firms, while the Law of Property establishes what rights owners have and how ownership rights can be created in the first place. Module 3 is thus devoted to these great areas of our Common Law, and for the benefit of my fall business law students, below are links to several short blog posts describing the contents of Module 3 of our legal and ethical environment of business course:

Welcome to the online home of the IASS
Hopefully It’s Interesting.
In Conversation with Legal and Moral Philosophers
Relitigating Our Favorite Disputes
PhD, Jagiellonian University
Inquiry and opinion
Life is all about being curious, asking questions, and discovering your passion. And it can be fun!
Books, papers, and other jurisprudential things
Ramblings of a retiree in France
BY GRACE THROUGH FAITH
Natalia's space
hoping we know we're living the dream
Lover of math. Bad at drawing.
We hike, bike, and discover Central Florida and beyond
Making it big in business after age 40
Reasoning about reasoning, mathematically.
I don't mean to sound critical, but I am; so that's how it comes across
remember the good old days...
"Let me live, love and say it well in good sentences." - Sylvia Plath
a personal view of the theory of computation
Submitted For Your Perusal is a weblog wherein Matt Thomas shares and writes about things he thinks are interesting.
Logic at Columbia University
Just like the Thesis Whisperer - but with more money
the sky is no longer the limit
Technology, Culture, and Ethics
Just like the horse whisperer - but with more pages
Poetry, Other Words, and Cats