Unqualified Offerings

Looking Sideways at Your World Since October 2001

Archive for May 31st, 2011

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Julian Sanchez facts

By Thoreau
Via a friend who is on Twitter, I learned that Julian Sanchez suffered an attempted mugging last week.  He managed to fight them off, however, and is fine.  In light of his martial prowess, I’d like to offer a few facts about everybody’s favorite libertarian philosophy major whiz kid:
Philosophers recognize four categories of just [...]

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Actual libertarian economic blogging: Unexamined assumptions

By Thoreau
We haven’t had any of this for a while, so let’s get to it.
To whatever extent I might be classified as falling in some region of the libertarian camp on economics, I’d say that the core idea of libertarian economics is a negative idea:  Opposition to coercive interference in economic transactions between individuals.  However, [...]

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Give a blogger a hand: FSP

By Thoreau
Female Science Professor, a venerable fixture of the academic science blogosphere, and one of the few non-biomed folks to rise to prominent in the science blogosphere, is reflecting on her five years of blogging and debating whether she wants to continue her current pace of blogging.  I, for one, would hate to see her [...]

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Today’s Fiziks Finds

By Thoreau
Cells that respond to chemotactic signals can get near-optimal solutions to the Traveling Salesman Problem. In other words, if they simply follow their nose and sniff out high concentrations of whatever they’re looking for, they can find the most efficient way to get from one place to another while visiting a lot of targets [...]

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Fiziks speculations

By Thoreau
One thing that fascinates me in physics is that the Second Law of Thermodynamics can be used to derive some important results in physics.  Some of them are rather technical (e.g. the relationship between the Einstein A and B coefficients, the Abbe Sine condition), but one is quite simple:  The impossibility of a one-way [...]