The United States Air Force Space Command was founded on this day in 1982.

The United States Air Force Space Command was founded on this day in 1982.

1. Which do you prefer: 140 or 280?
2. When do you know when to stop scrolling?


Hat tip: u/Teutonic_Action (via reddit)
FYI, we have assembled below for your edification and delight our previous posts on various aspects of Ernest Hemingway’s timeless novella “The Old Man and the Sea” (OMAS), from most recent to oldest:

Here’s one of our favorite John McCain stories, via this beautiful eulogy in The Atlantic by Todd S. Purdam: “When his North Vietnamese captors demanded the names of his flight squadron, McCain recited the names of the Green Bay Packers offensive line, knowing that the false information would suffice (for the moment) to end their abuse. ‘There’s no bar fight he will walk away from,’ his onetime political strategist John Weaver once told me.”
And when I lived in them:
Honorable mentions: Ponce, P.R. (1998-2009) and Viejo San Juan, P.R. (1993-1995)

We are reposting this tweet in memory of our favorite Latin American man of letters, the late Jorge Luis Borges, and in honor of our 50th birthday today. (Actually, I’m not 50. I’m really 18 with 32 years of experience!)

Also: Happy Paris Liberation Day!
What is “proof beyond a reasonable doubt”? Your guess is as good as mine! By way of example, consider the case of Paul Manafort, President Trump’s friend and former campaign manager who was tried in federal court earlier this month on 18 separate counts of bank and tax fraud. After asking the judge to define “reasonable doubt” and after four full days of deliberations, the jury in his case found him guilty on eight of those counts, but the jurors could not agree on a verdict for the remaining 10 counts. (In criminal cases, the jury’s verdict must be unanimous, so a hung jury occurs even if just one juror disagrees with the remaining jurors about the outcome.) The Manafort trial thus poses a deeper question. Why do verdicts have to be all-or-nothing, “guilty” or “not guilty”? In other words, why can’t jurors emit a Bayesian verdict instead of wallowing over the meaning of “reasonable doubt”?
We have blogged about this possibility before and have delved into the mathematical details of Bayesian voting in a previous paper of ours, which was published in the Criminal Law Bulletin (vol. 51, no. 3). In summary, rather than voting “guilty” or “not guilty,” jurors could instead keep a scorecard and score the evidence presented by the prosecution at trial. Each juror’s scorecard could be based on a ten-point scale, with 10 being the highest possible score (an open-and-shut case) and 0 being the lowest score (not even a scintilla of evidence in support of the prosecution’s case). So, for example, if a juror believes that the prosecution has proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt, the juror would assign a high score, such as a 9 or a 10, or if the juror thinks the case is too close to call, he could assign a 5. Accordingly, the jury’s “verdict” would consist of a numerical value–either the average value or the sum total of all their individual scores (I refer to this collective score as the “range verdict.”) Under this system, the prosecution would win a conviction only if the average value or sum total of the jury’s collective score exceeded some critical threshold value.

Hopefully It’s Interesting.
In Conversation with Legal and Moral Philosophers
PhD, Jagiellonian University
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
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