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  1. Retweeted
    Aug 2

    In physics you can particularize from the general and generalize from the particular. Elsewhere [social "science"] you can only generalize from the particular.

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  2. Jul 26

    "Can we find a way to enjoy the benefits of globalisation while safeguarding against the disruptions and losses it brings to some workers?" My new essay in .

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  3. Retweeted
    Jul 26

    "Free trade and openness to immigration bring enormous macroeconomic benefits to all countries ... However, these policies do not necessarily promote the wellbeing of all citizens within particular countries," argues .

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  4. Retweeted
    Jul 6

    As you recover from the long weekend, take a look at our most recent Reads of the Week! This week covers: how rent prices affect racial segregation; vaping regulations; and problems with China's power structure.

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  5. Retweeted
    Jun 30

    “If the natural tendencies of mankind are so bad that it is not safe to permit people to be free, how is it that the tendencies of these organizers are always good? Do not the legislators and their appointed agents also belong to the human race?” —Frédéric Bastiat

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  6. Jun 27

    To mark the Chinese Communist Party's 100th anniversary, I wrote an essay for on China, the Hayekian knowledge problem, and the role of propaganda in dictatorships.

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  7. Jun 9

    Excellent article by in : "As long as we keep relying on induction, AI programs will be forever prediction machines hopelessly limited by what data they are fed."

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  8. Retweeted
    Jun 3

    Making countless small decentralized errors is how we learn and progress. Making a few big centralized errors is how we wipe ourselves out.

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  9. Retweeted
    May 31

    "While open societies strive to make the best use of the possibilities of man, totalitarian regimes aim to change human nature itself..."

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  10. May 30
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  11. May 28

    "Once all political opposition is cast as the product of misinformation or science illiteracy, compromise becomes irrational, the sacrifice of truth to appease the ignorant."

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  12. May 28

    Insightful essay by in . "The belief that misinformation is today’s main threat to democracy blinds us to the pernicious effects of a broader preoccupation with certitude."

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  13. May 21
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  14. Retweeted
    May 17

    "Considering the fact that conspiracy theories can often have substantial negative real-world consequences, it is important to understand factors that lead to the adoption of conspiracy beliefs." More in our Perspectives section:

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  15. May 6
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  16. May 3

    "Absolute truth may seem unattainable, but we can move closer to achieving it by allowing the evolutionary process of trial and error to play out." My new article for .

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  17. Apr 27

    Excellent article by Martin Wolf in : "Its economic assets are too great and, while America could falter, that would be its choice and not its fate."

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  18. Retweeted
    Apr 20

    In our increasingly polarized age, it has become commonplace to attribute our political opponents’ beliefs to their irrationality. But some argue that this is unreasonable, since both sides have irrational tendencies. More from AllSides Perspectives:

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  19. Retweeted
    Apr 20

    'Rationalism is an attitude of readiness to listen to contrary arguments and to learn from experience… of admitting that “I may be wrong and you may be right and, by an effort, we may get nearer the truth.”' – Karl Popper, The Open Society and its Enemies

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  20. Retweeted
    Apr 12

    "While open societies embrace uncertainty, closed societies, in their quest for the creation of an ideal society...aim to suppress uncertainty."

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