quinta-feira, 30 de agosto de 2012

Necessidade

"La necesidad es el pretexto para todos los atentados contra la libertad individual. Es el argumento de los tiranos. Es el credo de los esclavos." - William Pitt

Quem puder foge do paraíso socialista

Filha do vice-presidente de Cuba, Glenda Diaz desertou para os Estados Unidos

Cuba libre – A filha do vice-presidente de Cuba desertou para os Estados Unidos e vive agora em Tampa, no estado da Florida, informou na segunda-feira (27) o jornal norte-americano “El Nuevo Herald”, versão em espanhol do “Miami Herald”.
Mais

Felicidade


O estado - uma coisa do passado

Isaac M. Morehouse  "Fast or slow, big or small, conscious or unconscious as it may be, the world will change. The state can be a relic of the past, harder to understand as time moves on, like slavery in America today. In so many ways the trend is well underway and we are already in a mostly stateless world, though it is little appreciated or understood. It may be a matter of merely realizing what is already true: the state is not, and never has been necessary." http://lfb.org/today/how-the-world-will-change/

Chamada de artigos LASA

Call for papers for LASA 2013 

The message below was sent to BRASA encouraging proposals for policy relevant economics research:  
The LASA website has posted the Guidelines and Submission Process for LASA2013 Proposals. Please make sure you read the guidelines before submitting any type of proposal (Individual, Panel, Workshop, Chair/Discussant, Special Event and Travel Grant Requests): http://lasa.international.pitt.edu/eng/congress/guidelines.asp
Note: If you have a specific paper topic, but instead of submitting an individual proposal you are considering setting up a panel and need colleagues to form the panel with you, please visit our “Panels Wanted” section to connect with other members of LASA to form a panel together: http://lasa.international.pitt.edu/eng/congress/paperrequests.asp pitt.edu/eng/congress/paperrequests.asp>  
They will be accepting proposals for LASA2013 until September 1, 2012. For other important dates, please visit: http://lasa.international.pitt.edu/eng/congress/important-dates.asp

quarta-feira, 29 de agosto de 2012

Sofrer por nada

Low-Calorie Diets Don’t Help Lifespan, Monkey Study Shows

Monkeys fed a severely low-calorie diet didn’t live longer than their normal-diet peers, a 23-year study showed, contradicting research that suggests living thin on greatly curtailed food intake extends lifespans.
The study by researchers from the National Institute on Aging sought to address whether diet restrictions had health benefits in rhesus monkeys, long-lived primates like people, thus rendering clues about human aging. Though the thin monkeys seemed healthier by some measures, calorie restriction failed to alter either cause of death or survival, the research showed.
Mais

Lei de patentes na crítica

American law is patent nonsense

The poster child for patents is the pharmaceuticals industry. But, as Richard Posner, a federal appeals court judge, has argued, what works in this sector is not necessarily appropriate in communications, software or elsewhere. Bringing a new drug to market is inordinately expensive, mainly because of the need for large clinical trials. Monopoly rights over new drugs provide a needed spur to invention. And because trials take as long as a decade, the 20-year exclusivity typically granted can mean only 10 years of monopoly profits.
The technology industry is different. No clinical trials are needed, so costs of development are lower and the case for monopoly weaker.
Mais

Greve - Antony Mueller citado no Rio Times

Strikes End Except for Federal Police

By Lucy Jordan, Senior Contributing Reporter
"... At a time when Brazil’s economy has slowed significantly there is little enthusiasm in government for broad wage hikes, especially for a public sector that many say is too large, and already enjoys significantly more benefits and job security than the private sector.
“Any agreement should include a reform of the public sector,” said Anthony Mueller, a professor of economics at the Federal University of Sergipe. “The Brazilian public sector must be drastically reduced in order to save expenditure.”
With her own deadline looming on Friday, when President Rousseff must set the 2013 federal budget, some say that miscalculations on both sides have escalated a wage dispute into the greatest challenge that Rousseff’s nineteen-month old presidency has yet faced.
“The government made the error of not rapidly and forcefully responding to the demands,” said Professor Mueller. “The leaders of the strike miscalculated the resolve of the government to keep the budget deficit down.”
“In the end both sides lost,” he added. “Yet most of all it was Brazil that lost.”
Mais

terça-feira, 28 de agosto de 2012

Lições de inovação para o ensino médio

Ensino Médio
Lições de inovação
 

 

Como escolas públicas brasileiras conseguiram envolver os pais nas tarefas escolares, mesmo quando não tinham repertório para isso, e melhoraram o desempenho de seus alunos.

Mais

O fracasso da educação pública

Public High Schools Are Not Doing Their Jobs

O princípio eterno da atuação governamental


Patente de Apple


Chiclete que mata


UFPE continua greve

Após assembleia, professores da UFPE decidem continuar paralisação

Apesar de iniciado em 17 de maio, movimento tem aumento de adesão.
Calendário do Vestibular 2013 será mantido, de acordo com a Covest.

Do G1 PE
3 comentários
Há mais de três meses em greve, os professores da Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (UFPE) decidiram continuar com a paralisação, após assembleia realizada na tarde desta segunda-feira (27), no auditório do Centro de Ciências Sociais Aplicadas (CCSA), Campus do Recife. De acordo com o presidente da Associação dos Docentes da UFPE (Adufepe), cerca de 300 professores estiveram presentes na reunião. Destes, 196 votaram a favor da continuação da greve, iniciada em 17 de maio. Apenas 42 docentes votaram contra a decisão.

Capitalismo de estado em crise

"O capitalismo de estado é o problema, solusolução" - Antony Mueller

Mais

O problema fundamental do marxismo

The Dialectic of Destruction

"... Marx and his followers have never demonstrated any awareness of the vital importance of the problem of allocation of scarce resources. Their vision of communism is that all such economic problems are trivial, requiring neither entrepreneurship nor a price system nor genuine economic calculation – that all problems could be quickly solved by mere accounting or recording. The classic absurdity on this matter was laid down by Lenin, who accurately expressed Marx's view in declaring that the functions of entrepreneurship and of allocation of resources have been "simplified by capitalism to the utmost" to mere matters of accounting and to "the extraordinarily simple operations of watching, recording, and issuing receipts, within the reach of anybody who can read and write and knows the first four rules of arithmetic." Ludwig von Mises wryly and justly comments that Marxists and other socialists have had "no greater perception of the essentials of economic life than the errand boy, whose only idea of the work of the entrepreneur is that he covers pieces of paper with letters and figures."
Mais

segunda-feira, 27 de agosto de 2012

Vida

"Se vives de acordo com as leis da natureza, nunca serás pobre; se vives de acordo com as opiniões alheias, nunca serás rico".
Sêneca

Nassim Taleb

His book The Bed of Procrustes summarizes the central problem: "we humans, facing limits of knowledge, and things we do not observe, the unseen and the unknown, resolve the tension by squeezing life and the world into crisp commoditized ideas". Taleb disagrees with Platonic (i.e., theoretical) approaches to reality to the extent that they lead people to have the wrong map of reality rather than no map at all.[16] He opposes most economic and grand social science theorizing, which in his view suffer acutely from the problem of overuse of Plato's Theory of Forms.
Relatedly, he also believes that universities are better at public relations and claiming credit than generating knowledge. He argues that knowledge and technology are usually generated by what he calls "stochastic tinkering" rather than by top-down directed research.[23][47][48][49]
He calls for cancellation of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics, saying that the damage from economic theories can be devastating.[50][51] He opposes top-down knowledge as an academic illusion and believes that price formation obeys an organic process.[52] Together with Espen Gaarder Haug, Taleb asserts that option pricing is determined in a "heuristic way" by operators, not by a model, and that models are "lecturing birds on how to fly".[52] Pablo Triana has explored this topic with reference to Haug and Taleb,[53][54] and says that perhaps Taleb is correct to urge that banks be treated as utilities forbidden to take potentially lethal risks, while hedge funds and other unregulated entities should be able to do what they want.[55]
Taleb's writings discuss the error of comparing real-world randomness with the "structured randomness" in quantum physics where probabilities are remarkably computable and games of chance like casinos where probabilities are artificially built.[34] Taleb calls this the "Ludic fallacy". His argument centers on the idea that predictive models are based on Plato's Theory of Forms, gravitating towards mathematical purity and failing to take some key ideas into account, such as: the impossibility of possessing all relevant information, that small unknown variations in the data can have a huge impact, and flawed theories/models that are based on empirical data and that fail to consider events that have not taken place but could have taken place. Discussing the Ludic fallacy in The Black Swan, he writes, "The dark side of the moon is harder to see; beaming light on it costs energy. In the same way, beaming light on the unseen is costly in both computational and mental effort."
In the second edition of The Black Swan, he posited that the foundations of quantitative economics are faulty and highly self-referential. He states that statistics is fundamentally incomplete as a field as it cannot predict the risk of rare events, a problem that is acute in proportion to the rarity of these events. With the mathematician Raphael Douady, he called the problem statistical undecidability (Douady and Taleb, 2010).
Taleb sees his main challenge as mapping his ideas of "robustification" and "anti-fragility", that is, how to live and act in a world we do not understand and build robustness to black swan events. Taleb introduced the idea of the "fourth quadrant". One of its applications is in his definition of the most effective (that is, least fragile) risk management approach: what he calls the 'barbell' strategy which is based on avoiding the middle in favor of linear combination of extremes, across all domains from politics to economics to one's personal life. These are deemed more robust to estimation errors. For instance, he suggests that investing money in 'medium risk' investments is pointless because risk is difficult if not impossible to compute. His preferred strategy is to be both hyper-conservative and hyper-aggressive at the same time. For example, an investor might put 80 to 90% of their money in extremely safe instruments, such as treasury bills, with the remainder going into highly risky and diversified speculative bets. An alternative suggestion is to engage in highly speculative bets that are insured against losses of more than a specified amount. He asserts that by adopting these strategies a portfolio can be "robust", that is, gain a positive exposure to black swan events while limiting losses suffered by such random events.[56] Taleb also applies a similar barbell-style approach to health and exercise. Instead of doing steady and moderate exercise daily, he suggests that it is better to do a low-effort exercise such as walking slowly most of the time, while occasionally expending extreme effort. He avers that the human body evolved to live in a random environment, with various unexpected but intense efforts and much rest.[57]
Mais

Não só na América


Bolsas

Oportunidade para grupos estudantis

A Atlas Network acaba de lançar uma grande oportunidade para estudantes internacionais: o programa de grants para grupos estudantis, restrito a organizações de fora dos Estados Unidos .
Grupos como think tanks também podem concorrer, contanto que possuam programas diretamente focados em estudantes universitários. A maioria dos grants é de menos de US$5.000, mas projetos mais ambiciosos podem ser enviados.
Para inscrever o seu grupo ou organização, preencha o formulário aqui (em inglês). Para mais informações visite a página do programa da Atlas Network.
Perguntas podem ser enviadas para Elisa.Martins@AtlasNetwork.org.

Saúdo na sociedade doente


Apple e a propriedade intelectual

Pedido de suporte


Pessoal, uma amiga minha criou um projeto...
Luciana Lopes Nominato Braga27 de Agosto de 2012 13:44
Pessoal, uma amiga minha criou um projeto social pró-mercado na Indonésia, que ajuda a levar energia para populações rurais. As mulheres da comunidade viram revendedoras de lâmpadas solares portáteis, e são treinadas em vendas, marketing, contabilidade, etc.. O projeto - "Project Light" - está concorrendo a um prêmio e precisa ser votado. Para votar e conhecer mais, segue o link:
apps.facebook.com

Vote for the People's Choice Award NOW!

The project entry that garners the highest numb...

domingo, 26 de agosto de 2012

Liberdade implica responsabilidade


Hayek estrela em Tampa

It’s the Economy

Prime Time for Paul Ryan’s Guru (the One Who’s Not Ayn Rand

"... Hayek’s ideas aren’t completely new to American politics. Some mainstream Republicans, including Ronald Reagan, have name-checked him since at least the 1980s as a shorthand way of signaling their unfettered faith in the free market and objection to big government. But few actually engaged with Hayek’s many contentious (and outré) views, particularly his suspicion of all politicians, including Republicans, who claim to know something about how to make an economy function better. For these reasons, and others, Hayek has become fashionable of late among antigovernment protesters, and if Ryan brings even a watered-down version of his ideas into the Republican mainstream, the country’s biggest battles about the economy won’t be between right and left, but within the Republican Party itself — between Tea Party radicals who may feel legitimized and the establishment politicians they believe stand in their way.
For the past century, nearly every economic theory in the world has emerged from a broad tradition known as neoclassical economics. (Even communism can be seen as a neoclassical critique.) Neoclassicists can be left-wing or right-wing, but they share a set of crucial core beliefs, namely that it is useful to look for government policies that can improve the economy. Hayek and the rest of his ilk — known as the Austrian School — reject this. To an Austrian, the economy is incomprehensibly complex and constantly changing; and technocrats and politicians who claim to have figured out how to use government are deluded or self-interested or worse. According to Hayek, government intervention in the free market, like targeted tax cuts, can only make things worse...."

O fracasso do ensino tradicional

Tempo gastado, educção ruim. Decorar não é aprender e aprender ainda não é entender

Professor da Unicamp contesta o ensino tradicional

24:14em 25/08/201227 visualizações
O professor da Unicamp, Rubem Alves, disse em entrevista ao Globo News Dossiê, que grande parte do que os alunos estudam para o vestibular é inútil. Para ele, o papel do professor não é passar conhecimentos, e sim, provocar a inteligência do aluno.

Mais

sábado, 25 de agosto de 2012

Uma voz de China

“Nem eu nem meus alunos acreditamos no Partido Comunista. Então, em vez de gastar tempo repetindo teorias idiotas que não servem para absolutamente nada, prefiro ter uma discussão aberta com os meus alunos sobre os problemas do país, principalmente a corrupção existente entre nossos governantes.”
Professor chinês da disciplina "Socialismo Científico"
 

Desigualdade e educação

Para combater a desigualdade, o caminho é a educação básica, não a reserva de vagas em universidades

O critério racial fere a isonomia. Que os militantes da causa negra não se iludam: projeto das cotas não passa de cortina de fumaça

Mais

Como as escolas públicas destroem o cristianismo na América (e em outros lugares)

 Ever since the Federal Department of Education was created by President Jimmy Carter in 1977, the quality of education in America has declined, and America came behind most of the industrial world in math and science. The Federal Department...

of Education is an insult to the American people, for it is built on the idea that we are too dumb to manage our education system without the help of a government bureaucracy, even though we did fine without it during the first two hundred years of American History. Before the federal government got involved in education, those who could not afford a college education became apprentices. Education should be managed at the local level, not the federal or even the state levels.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bh959i2Dcc

A revolução educaional está chegando ao Brasil

http://www.fundacaolemann.org.br/khanportugues/

Como baixar de peso

Debunking the Hunter-Gatherer Workout
All of this means that if we want to end obesity, we need to focus on our diet and reduce the number of calories we eat, particularly the sugars our primate brains have evolved to love. We’re getting fat because we eat too much, not because we’re sedentary. Physical activity is very important for maintaining physical and mental health, but we aren’t going to Jazzercise our way out of the obesity epidemic.
Mais

Guerra

"War is a primitive human institution. From time immemorial, men were eager to fight, to kill, and to rob one another. However, the acknowledgment of this fact does not lead to the conclusion that war is an indispensable form of interpersonal relations and that the endeavors to abolish war are against nature and therefore doomed to failure." -- Ludwig von Mises

O estado do mundo

Robert Higgs explica: 
The greatest problem mankind faces in the present world consists in the conjunction of these conditions: (1) people virtually everywhere on earth have political rulers; (2) these rulers are more or less, depending on the particular case, homicidal sociopaths and psychopaths; (3) these rulers now possess either weapons of mass destruction or the capability of creating such weapons; (4) the likelihood that they will never use such weapons is very small; and (5) when these weapons are used on a large scale, civilization -- and perhaps the human race itself -- will be destroyed. In short, the nightmare in which the human race now finds itself trapped emerges from the existence of the modern, technologically advanced state. Each day that passes without utter catastrophe is almost a miracle. But the probability of a long succession of such days is vanishingly small. Do the math.

Época revela supersalários


Reforma da escola pública na América

A Formação Moral e o Movimento pela Liberdade de Escolha Escolar
Ray Nothstine
A batalha nos Estados Unidos por uma reforma significativa na educação pública tem sido um longo e demorado processo, que abrange décadas. No entanto, as administrações estaduais, não o governo federal, estão mudando o rumo das coisas.
Mais

quinta-feira, 23 de agosto de 2012

Advogados gostam de propriedade intelectual

Apple Patent Battles Create Lawyer Boon at $1,200 an Hour


Aug. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. has spent at least $32 million in one patent-infringement dispute with Google Inc. (GOOG)’s Motorola Mobility unit -- one among many legal fights on four continents.
Add them up and it’s clear the Cupertino, California-based company is paying hundreds of millions of dollars in its quest to prove that Samsung Electronics Co. (005930), Motorola Mobility and HTC Corp. ripped off the iPhone.
                                               
Aug. 23 (Bloomberg) -- General Patent Corp Vice President Richard Ehrlickman weighs Apple and Samsung's patent claims. He speaks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television's "Bottom Line." (Source: Bloomberg)
Apple contends devices using Google’s Android operating system copy features that make the iPhone and iPad tablet computer unique, and is fighting counterclaims it uses other companies’ inventions. Photographer: Tim Boyle/Bloomberg
The lawsuits are a boon for patent lawyers, who bill companies as much as $1,200 an hour each for their ability to help jurors and judges understand technology and arcane rules of law.
Mais

A orígem das inovações

De onde vêm e de onde não vêm as inovações?

Arrogância (intelectual)

“A única coisa mais perigosa do que a ignorância é a arrogância” (Albert Einstein). 
Veja também:
Hayek: A pretensão do conhecimento

A doença da medicina moderna

"Medicine is not health care; it is sick care. And when you take sick care and provide it through a culture like health care, then you end up with a sick culture."
Novo Documentário
Trailer

quarta-feira, 22 de agosto de 2012

Brasil pecisa uma revolução nos gastos

Brasil precisa de uma revolução no uso dos gastos públicos em educação, diz Maílson

Maílson da Nóbrega
É bem-intencionado o aumento dos gastos públicos em educação para 10% do PIB, aprovado em comissão especial da Câmara. Mas é também um enorme equívoco. Não quebrará o país, como se disse, mas vai exigir maior carga tributária (a margem para novas despesas é ínfima) e pode reduzir o potencial de crescimento. Ou seja, menos emprego, menos renda e menos bem-estar, ao contrário do que parece.
Não é o volume de gastos que melhora a educação. O Brasil já despende 5,1% do PIB na área, enquanto é de 4,8% a média dos países-membros da Organização para a Cooperação e o Desenvolvimento Econômico (OCDE), quase todos muito ricos. Segundo as Nações Unidas/Unesco, nossos gastos superam, como proporção do PIB, os de Japão (3,3%), Alemanha (4%), Coreia do Sul (4,5%) e Canadá (4,6%). Mesmo assim, no último teste conduzido pela OCDE/Pisa, ficamos em 53º lugar entre 65 países em leitura, matemática e ciência. À nossa frente estão Colômbia, México, Uruguai, Chile, Tailândia, Turquia e outros países emergentes. A China (Xangai) ficou em primeiro lugar nas três matérias.
Mais

Que falta para melhor a educação no Brasil?

Entrevista com João Batista Araujo e Oliveira

Sobram pedagogos e faltam gestores, diz especialista

Em entrevista a VEJA, o educador João Batista Araujo e Oliveira diz que o Brasil necessita de redes de ensino fundamental eficientes, não de ilhas de excelência, e anuncia um prêmio para os prefeitos que avançarem nesse objetivo

Mais

Dilma

Dilam eleita 3. mais poderosa mulher do mundo.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Forbes magazine ranked German Chancellor Angela Merkel the most powerful woman in the world for the second year in a row in the annual list dominated by politicians, businesswomen and media figures.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton placed second, followed by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, making the top three spots unchanged from last year.
Mais

Bolsas

Apply Now for a Mises Summer Fellowship
The Mises Institute is now accepting applications for 2013 Summer Fellowships in residence for graduate or law students, ABDs, and post-docs interested in scientific research in the Austrian School and classical liberalism. A limited number of fellowships are available to exceptional undergraduates who have attended Mises University or The Austrian Scholars Conference.
Mais

terça-feira, 21 de agosto de 2012

Escola ruim - causa são os pais

So, where’s the group in the U.S. that could try harder? Is it the teachers, more concerned with their tenure and pension rights than actually teaching kids? Is it miserly federal and state lawmakers, starving their educators of resources? Or maybe it is the lackadaisical students, too addicted to questing with their avatar through World of Warcraft to think about algebra?
The answer, it turns out, is none of the above. If there’s a crisis in U.S. education, the fault lies with a group more accustomed to leveling blame than receiving it: parents.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-08-19/the-real-reason-americas-schools-stink

Quem matou J.F.K.?

http://lewrockwell.com/miller/miller40.1.html

O país da liberdade cai cada vez mais na ditadura

Amerika’s Future Is Death

by Paul Craig Roberts
PaulCraigRoberts.org
"... A gullible population is helpless if government decides to enslave the people. It is child’s play for government to discredit a people’s natural leaders and those who provide the people with accurate information. Most Americans have a very small knowledge base and very large ideological preconceptions. Consequently, they cannot tell fiction from fact.
Consider the case of Julian Assange. When the US government, angry that WikiLeaks had published leaked documents that revealed the mendacity and deceit of Washington, first struck out at Assange, support for Assange was almost universal. Then Washington put out the story on the Internet that Assange was an intelligence agent working for the CIA or the even more hateful Mossad. Both leftwing and rightwing Internet sites fell for the obvious lie. Here we have gullibility on the level with those who believed Stalin’s charge that Bukharin was a capitalist agent...
 It was like Dominique Strauss-Kahn all over again. Falsely accused of sexually assaulting a New York hotel maid, the Director of the International Monetary Fund, chased on two continents by celebrity-hunting women, was knocked out of the race for the French presidency and had to resign his IMF position. The New York police, trained by decades of feminist propaganda to regard every sex charge brought by a women as the absolute truth, were made to look foolish and incompetent when clear evidence emerged that the charge was fabricated in order to extract money from Strauss-Kahn and possibly in order to knock him out of contention for the French presidency..."
Mais

O estado de prisão

The American Prison State


It is time to take prisons seriously. The United States incarcerates more people than any country in the world today and throughout history. The financial costs are tremendous and rising. One in every one hundred Americans is jailed within this so-called land of the free. Many have committed no violent crimes. Not a few are in for supposed political crimes. Some are wholly innocent of both yet languish in captivity. What are the sociological, political, economic, cultural, and historical consequences of incarceration?
Mais

Sociologia da encarcerarão

Vídeo educativo sobre encarceração

The United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world—more even than China or Russia. Prof. Daniel J. D'Amico explains that as of 2010 more than 1.6 million people were serving jail sentences in America. Professor D'Amico suggests that "prisons are not what we think about when we think of America, and they shouldn't have to be." According to D'Amico, a free country should not have 1.6 million people in prison, and a fiscally responsible country cannot afford to. As Prof. D'Amico points out, it is time for Americans to recognize that the U.S. criminal justice system is desperately in need of reform.
Learn More: 1. "The Caging of America" [article]: Wide ranging New Yorker piece, discusses history, ethics, everyday prisoner experience. Explores a few theories as to why our prison system is the way it is. http://nyr.kr/OGTXrd 2. "The Business Ethics of Incarceration: The Moral Implications of Treating Prisons Like Businesses" [scholarly article]: Professor D'Amico addresses the economics and morality of prison and prison privatization. http://bit.ly/OsMQFD 3. "U.S. prison population dwarfs that of other nations" [article]: New York Times article focusing on America's disproportionate prison population. 
http://nyti.ms/QSVprm 4. "Prisoners' Poetry" [poems]: A website featuring poems written by prisoners. http://bit.ly/Sd93to
Discussion Questions: 1. What are the causes for the unusually high incarceration rate in the United States? 2. Do you think prisons are an effective way of handling crime? 3. What alternatives or reforms to the current prison system can you imagine for handling crime more effectively?
Veja também
 The Prison in Economics: Private and Public Incarceration in Ancient Greece,
http://www.danieljdamico.com/CV%20and%20Publications_files/prison%20public%20choice%20proof.pdf

The Imprisoner's Dilemma: The Political Economy of Proportionate Punishment,
http://digilib.gmu.edu:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1920/3137/D'Amico_Daniel.pdf;jsessionid=70B620EB8D8B83FF2C25C781D25FB6D3?sequence=1

Congresso de Direito e Economia

VI Congresso de Direito e Economia do IDERS


De 29 a 30 de agosto de 2012
Auditório da Faculdade de Ciências Econômicas da UFRGS
Avenida João Pessoa, nº 52, 3º andar- Porto Alegre
 
É com grande satisfação que o Instituto de Direito e Economia do Rio Grande do Sul - IDERS anuncia a abertura das inscrições para a VI edição de seu Congresso anual.

A Conferência de Abertura do VI Congresso será ministrada no dia 29 de agosto pelo Professor Fernando Araújo, da Universidade de Lisboa. O evento abordará ainda questões ligadas à Análise Econômica do Direito, através de palestras sobre temas como Jurimetria, Teoria dos Jogos, Mercosul e Tratados Internacionais, Economia Constitucional, Responsabilidade Civil e Inteligência Artificial e Modelos de Comportamento Racional. 

Além da Conferência de Abertura e das Palestras, o VI Congresso de Direito e Economia IDERS pela primeira vez proporcionará espaço próprio para a apresentação de trabalhos na área de L&E, selecionados a partir de chamada pública.

Nunca confia em Hollywood

Leia que o meu amigo e colega Bob Murphy diz sobre of filme "Uma mente brilhante" que trata a vida do economista-matemático John Nash:

Robert Murphy "... had a guy I knew in grad school email me, asking about the bar scene in "A Beautiful Mind," and how to research more on John Nash. Y'all need to know the awful truth about Ron Howard: Actually what is known as "Nash equilibrium" is the exact *opposite* of what was depicted in that scene. That is the equilibrium concept used in non-cooperative game theory, which models things like the Prisoner's Dilemma which you may have heard of. Now Nash also worked on what's called cooperative game theory, and maybe that's what the script writers had in mind, but my hunch is that they had no freaking clue what they were talking about, and thought it would be dramatic to show Nash overturning Adam Smith.So if you want to google stuff, try "nash equilibrium" and "cooperative game theory" and maybe "nash solution cooperative game theory." But remember, the standard "Nash equilibrium" that will be the first thing in wikipedia, is the exact opposite of what they were doing in that bar scene."

Briga de patentes

Who Cares If Samsung Copied Apple?

The web has been alight these past few weeks with the details of the Apple v. Samsung lawsuit. It's been a unique opportunity to peer behind the curtain of how these two companies operate, as the trial seeks to answer the question: did Samsung copy Apple? But there's actually another question that I think is much more interesting to the future of innovation in the technology industry: regardless of whether the courts say that Samsung copied Apple or not, would we all be better off if we allowed — even encouraged — companies to copy one another?
This is particularly relevant in the context of the Apple/Samsung trial, because it isn't the first time Apple has been involved in a high-stakes "copying" court case. If you go back to the mid-1990s, there was their famous "look and feel" lawsuit against Microsoft. Apple's case there was eerily similar to the one they're running today: "we innovated in creating the graphical user interface; Microsoft copied us; if our competitors simply copy us, it's impossible for us to keep innovating." Apple ended up losing the case.
But it's what happened next that's really fascinating.
Mais 
Veja também

segunda-feira, 20 de agosto de 2012

Ser libertário


Parar com a escravidão


A ovelha e o lobo


Entenda a essência do estado


Obras do estado: escola e prisão


Lições que a escola do estado ensina


Entender ou não entender

"The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him." -- Leo Tolstoy, The Kingdom of God Is Within You (1894)
Leia mais

"Propriedade" intelectual

N. Stephan Kinsella

How Intellectual Property Hampers the Free Market

Advocates of free-market capitalism commonly believe in the legitimacy of intellectual property (IP) because IP rights are thought to be important to a system of private property.
But are they? There are good reasons to think that IP is not actually property—that it is actually antithetical to a private-property, free-market order. By intellectual property, I mean primarily patent and copyright.
It’s important to understand the origins of these concepts. As law professor Eric E. Johnson notes, “The monopolies now understood as copyrights and patents were originally created by royal decree, bestowed as a form of favoritism and control. As the power of the monarchy dwindled, these chartered monopolies were reformed, and essentially by default, they wound up in the hands of authors and inventors.”
Mais

Robert Higgs sobre governo

Robert Higgs
"If I had to use a single word to describe what is fundamentally wrong with government today, I would use the word fraud. Certainly nowadays—perhaps in every age—government is not what it claims to be (competent, protective, and just), and it is what it claims not to be (bungling, menacing, and unjust). In actuality, it is a vast web of deceit and humbug, and not for a good purpose, either. Indeed, its true purposes are as reprehensible as its noble claims are false. Its stock in trade is pretense. Yet the velvet glove of its countless claims of benevolence scarcely conceals its iron fist of violence and threats of more violence. It wants to be loved, but it will settle for being feared. The one thing it will not do is simply leave us alone." -- Robert Higgs, Against Leviathan (2004), p. xv.
 

domingo, 19 de agosto de 2012

How The American University was Killed, in Five Easy Steps


...
Second, you deprofessionalize and impoverish the professors (and continue to create a surplus of underemployed and unemployed Ph.D.s)
....
Step Five -- Destroy the Students

Um americano analisa a Alemanha de hoje

REPORTThe German Model

Germany has become a leading political and economic power, Peter Ross Range says. But what exactly can America learn from this country? Range took a trip all across Germany - and talked to those who shape the nation.