Author Archive | Roderick

Cave Canem

I’m back from the Austrian bash in Mississauga, where I heard some good papers and toured the nature trail along the powerful-purty Credit River (which despite recent unpleasantness has not dried up!).

Credit River

Inter alia I heard an interesting story about John McCain; apparently DC’s two airports used to have an agreement whereby Dulles would specialise in flights to the west coast while National wouldn’t fly any farther than Dallas. But McCain was unhappy about this, since he would fly frequently to Phoenix and didn’t like having to trek out each time to the inconvenient Dulles instead of the nearby National; so he sponsored legislation forcing the airports to change their policy. But it would have looked bad, i.e. too obvious (despite causing less bother to the airports), to make the change only for Phoenix, so he required it to be made across the board. Ah yes, country first.

Speaking electionwise, for years the Libertarian Party has fumed about the two 19th-century parties’ candidates’ refusal to debate third-party candidates. But now apparently the LP’s current candidate, Bob Barr, “has made it clear that he will only debate Mr. Nader and no one else” – thereby scuttling the LP’s nearly four-decades-old cavekid and dog policy and undermining its ability to argue for its own inclusion in debates in the future. Barr keeps finding new ways to be even more of a disaster than I had predicted.

In less annoying news, this story (conical hat tip to LRC) contains the following intriguing passage:

Ancient, 26,000-year-old footprints made by a child and a dog at Chauvet Cave, France, support the pet notion. Torch wipes accompanying the prints indicate the child held a torch while navigating the dark corridors accompanied by a dog.


Grade Inflation, Swedish Style

Let me go, you befuddled Keynesian!  I'm a Rothbardian cat!The man who wrote this –

[T]he terror attack could even do some economic good. Now, all of a sudden, we need some new office buildings. … Rebuilding will generate at least some increase in business spending. (New York Times, September 14, 2001)

– thereby flunking the most basic lesson in economics, has just been awarded the Nobel prize in economics.

(Unsurprisingly, Krugman doesn’t understand Austrian business cycle theory either.)

What’s next – a Nobel prize in biology to a creationist?


I’m On the Pavement Thinking About the Government

According to his boss, the latest Guantanamo prosecutor to resign is a “disgruntled” employee who is making “groundless” criticisms of “very ethical and hardworking people.” The disgruntled employee himself says: “I’ve been a conformist my entire life, and to speak out against the injustice wrought upon our worst enemies entailed a weather shift in my worldview.”

If only there were some song lyric about weather that would be appropriate to quote here ….


Aesthetic Anaesthetic

Scientists discover that you don’t mind as much being zapped by a laser if you’re looking at art you consider beautiful. (Conical hat tip to LRC.)

Head I by Francis Bacon That’s not particularly surprising, but I want to grouse a bit about a comment by project leader Marina de Tommaso, of the University of Bari’s Neurophysiopathology Pain Unit: “These people were not art experts so some of the pictures they found ugly would be considered masterpieces by the art world.”

Dr. de Tommaso is evidently no art expert herself, since her “so” seems to imply something that virtually no art expert would accept: namely, that finding a painting ugly is inconsistent with regarding it as a masterpiece. Beauty is, after all, only one artistically relevant property among others. Nor, common belief (and Randian invective) to the contrary notwithstanding, is the rejection of an exclusive emphasis on beauty a 20th-century development; what is the 18th-century distinction between the beautiful and the sublime but a recognition that there’s more to artistic value than beauty – and more to successful artistic impact than being soothing?


Some of the Above

For anyone who still cares about the LP, there’s a poll asking who you’d like to see as their next presidential nominee. Ron Paul is leading, followed by Mary Ruwart.


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