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Thursday, April 07, 2022

Formative experiences matter over long periods of time


With an election date still pending, what changes would a new government bring for the bureaucrats in the Canberra 'bubble'?


Great Resignation Isn’t Slowing and May Persist, Randstad Says


WFH forever? Two years into a work-from-home revolution, some may never return to the office


26 million people in lockdown after thousands of asymptomatic cases detected in Shanghai

Letter to SEC: How Stock Buybacks Undermine Investment in Innovation for the Sake of Stock-Price Manipulation

A comment on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s proposed rule “Share Repurchase Disclosure Modernization”, aka stock buybacks


How Compulsive Conformity Can Get People Killed:.


Everybody needs to learn about the dynamics of conformity. Blatant censorship, hostility to free speech, and campaigns to demonize mainstream American views were all unthinkable scenarios for most Americans just a few years ago.

Formative experiences matter over long periods of time

Formative experiences shape behavior for decades. We document a striking feature about those who came of driving age during the oil crises of the 1970s⁠—they drive less in the year 2000. The effect is not specific to these cohorts; price variation over time and across states indicates that gasoline price changes between ages 15–18 generally shift later-life travel behavior. Effects are not explained by recessions, income, or costly skill acquisition and are inconsistent with recency bias, mental plasticity, and standard habit-formation models. Instead, they likely reflect formation of preferences for driving or persistent changes in its perceived cost.

That is from a newly published paper (AEA gate) by Christopher Severen and Arthur A. van Benthem.



People are desperate to return to life as normal, but the rising number of infections is a reminder that this pandemic isn’t over 

Why is the UK seeing near-record Covid cases? We still believe the three big myths about Omicron

Guardian. And by “myths” we mean lies.


Never Had Covid? You May Hold Key To Beating the Virus Bloomberg. GM commments: “We’re back to the early 19th century and spontaneous generation — the virus is magically appearing in people’s noses and cannot be stopped in any way other than by ‘immunity.’ But in fact, yes, I indeed do hold the key to beating the virus — I masked and social distanced ultra-hard and called for Chinese-style lockdown.”


  • Lots of logic videos — over 180 of them, by Professor Sara Uckelman (Durham)
  • “The change is meant to reflect all four cardinal virtues of government identified by the Greek philosopher Plato in his most famous work, the Republic” — the Georgia House of Representatives adds “courage” to the state’s pledge of allegiance, which already mentions wisdom, justice, and moderation (via Tim O’Keefe)
  • “There are many opportunities to include Africana philosophy in your teaching curriculum; indeed it should be possible for just about any topic you might name” — Liam Kofi Bright (LSE) & Peter Adamson (LMU) have some advice on how to do it
  • Margaret Cavendish wrote “a proto-SF novel that explores early modern science, feminist and queer thought, and political philosophy” in 1666 — and Helen De Cruz (SLU) has posted a summary and illustrations of it
  • “Who knew that philosophy… could still be this controversial?” — Mark Oppenheimer & Jason Werbeloff, hosts of the Brain in the Vat podcast, defend the pursuit of “unaskable questions” in the wake of the controversy over Stephen Kershnar’s appearance on their program
  • There was a mistake in that “That’s Not Kant” post — thanks to Daniele Procida it has now been fixed, and an additional portrait of Kant that’s kind of badass has been added
  • Philosophers discuss the Russian invasion of Ukraine at Oxford — with Jeff McMahan, Janina Dill, Helen Frowe, Massimo Renzo, Zofia Stemplwoska, and Elad Uzan