######### Issues INDEX #########

Issues

Volume 5, Issue 1

December 13, 2019

December 13, 2019


Critical Essays


Review Essays


Book Reviews



Experiment Reviews


Biographies


Special Reports






Letters to the Editors

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### A Prescription for the Present [short_description] Achieving more relevancy for general equilibrium theory is desirable, and would require more work on modeling the features and interrelationships of economic variables, as described in this letter.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Some Like It Hot [short_description] Rather than it being a hot mess, Landauer’s principle is easily understood, easily derivable from basic principles of thermodynamics and statistical physics, and in accordance with experimental tests.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Norton’s No-Go Result [short_description] Physicists in particular should pay close attention: John Norton’s no-go result refers to a process that Rolf Landauer took for granted in his formulation of the thermodynamics of computation.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Louis Bachelier [short_description] Since Louis Bachelier’s only lasting contribution to mathematics seems to have been his thesis, it is not clear what one would say in a full-length biography. It is a curious and rather sad story...
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Building Bad [short_description] For most of his life, James Stevens Curl has studied what he calls “the ruination of towns and cities” through the effects of a global and celebrity-driven cult of modernist architecture.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Misunderstanding a Crisis [short_description] Modern macroeconomic theory has few answers to offer its practitioners. Its theories focus on aggregate spending when they should instead focus on the plans of economizing agents.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### More Views from Below [short_description] An economist in the micro sense of the term, Yves Montenay pulls from his experience working in commercial industry and offers his own ideas to the debate on data methodology and measurement.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Money for an Open Global Economy [short_description] Statistical data about the American economy have been compiled since the late 1800s. The same cannot be said of European economies, where GDP has only been reliably calculated since the 1930s.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### The Philosopher and the Practitioner [short_description] A political scientist warns against an exceedingly theoretical, partly obsolete, overly pessimistic, and ultimately incomplete view of nuclear deterrence and the risks associated with nuclear weapons.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### The Route to Nuclear War [short_description] Between nuclear powers, no-first-use declarations are built on sand. Even if a declaration is signed in good faith during peacetime, no aggressor can count on it being maintained in the stress of war.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### The Irrelevance of Deterrence [short_description] Nuclear deterrence is indeed a key part of many nuclear discussions, but it is merely theoretical and seems to have little utility for the people responsible for managing nuclear arsenals.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Managing Doomsday [short_description] How to avoid nuclear catastrophe? The correct course of action involves managing the risks associated with nuclear arsenals and aiming for synchronized arms reductions among adversaries.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Deterrence Lost [short_description] The threat of nuclear retaliation preserves peace. This is nuclear deterrence. It is a policy that Daniel Ellsberg should have explored in The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Unresolved Anomalies [short_description] Water is the chemical most familiar to us, used to wash, cook, heat, and cool. Despite being essential for daily life, water remains mysterious, exhibiting almost 40 anomalous properties.

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