We dodged a bullet last month when Hurricane Helene veered toward North Florida, but now another major storm (Milton) is heading our way, so I won’t be blogging for the next few days.
*Adam Smith in the City of Light*
I have just posted a revised and corrected draft of “Adam Smith in the City of Light“. Among other things, I have added my colleague and friend Alain Alcouffe as a co-author, for we have collaborated closely on this paper since June of this year. His comments have not only been invaluable; almost all of the revisions, corrections, and clarifications to the paper have been due to his good counsel. (A screenshot of our abstract pictured below.)
Sunday song: *Harbu Darbu*
To commemorate the first anniversary of the October 7 massacre:
Vincent Van Gogh’s Last Painting
Via YouTube channel Great Art Explained; hat tip: Kottke.
Micro-review: The Island
The stark landscape, the humble simplicity of Father Anatoly, the remoteness of the monastery on the White Sea, and the miracles of his redemption converge into a timeless snapshot of lived spirituality. The Patriarch of Moscow, Alexei II, praised The Island for its profound depiction of faith and monastic life.
Sarah Conover
Although I loved The Island–the 2006 Russian film directed by Pavel Lungin, written by Dmitry Sobolev, and starring Pyotr Mamonov as a fictional 20th-century Eastern Orthodox monk–I am giving it three (out of five) stars because the resolution of the film is too pat.
The movie begins with a tragic choice during wartime. It is 1942, a German destroyer captures a Russian coal station, and the Nazis round up the captain and his first mate. The Germans hand the first mate a gun and put him into an impossible moral dilemma: kill your captain, or we kill you.
The next time we meet our tragic sailor, it is 34 years later, and he is a monk who lives in a boiler room next to an Orthodox monastery on a remote island. He is now Father Anatoly, still atoning for his sin. He wears rags, toils all day, and refuses to follow to proper church rituals. As one reviewer puts it (Sarah Conover), “Is Father Anatoli a madman or a holy man? For most of the film we aren’t really sure. By the time the movie ends, we’ve likely made a decision.”
Wikipedia Wednesday: the coin rotation paradox
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coin_rotation_paradox
See also this 2023 Scientific American article describing an infamous SAT college entrance exam question that everyone got wrong! (It involves the coin rotation paradox.)
Twitter Tuesday: the Expanded States of America!
Can you imagine an alternate reality in which both Cuba and Cancun (as well as Baja California and most of northern Mexico!) were all part of the United States? What happened?
Monday Music: Mozart
Via Smithsonian Magazine: “A previously unknown piece of music composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart when he was probably in his early teens has been uncovered at a library in Germany.”


