Sunday, September 30, 2007

Proper analysis

When properly analyzed all intentional attitudes turns out to be relations to propositions. This does not reduce all intentional attitudes, or at least the intentionality of all intentional attitudes, to beliefs and desires; it allows that loving, hating, admiring, imagining, and so on are irreducible intentional attitudes.

Michelle Montague, Against Propositionalism, Nous; Blackwell Publishing, Sept 2007

Equal weight view

We have learned that the people one counts as peers on a given issue are more rare than one would initially have thought, and very often in agreement with oneself. So in messy real-world cases (involving basic political disagreement, for example), the equal weight view permits one's independent thinking on many matters to have significant weight. lt also requires one's opinions to be swamped by the majority when one counts a very great many of one's advisors as peers. That is a little odd, but the reasoning is that we should learn to live with the oddness.

Adam Elga; Reflection and Disagreement; Nous, Vol XLl, No 3, Blackwell Publishing, Boston MA & Oxford UK, Sept. 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

On Democracy

"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."

Thomas Jefferson


"No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session."

Judge Gideon J. Tucker

"The single most exciting thing you encounter in government is competence, because it's so rare."

Daniel P. Moynihan

Source: http://www.anenglishmanscastle.com/archives/004612.html

Asking the devil for salvation

Government vs. Monopolies

If you're looking to governments to save you from monopolies, you're asking the devil for salvation. A government is itself a monopoly on the creation of violence. Why would you expect one monopoly to be hostile a priori to other monopolies?

The theory is that a government is controlled by its citizens. However, control over the government is a public good. Like all public goods, it is underproduced.

http://angry-economist.russnelson.com/
2007/09/27#government-vs-monopolies

Source: www.adamsmith.org/blog

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Comparative study

Research into the course of progress

In 1808 the attempts of previous ruler at reform had ended in his being murdered. The capital was dominated by a reactionary mob of janissaries. The provinces had become semi-independent. The young Sultan bravely took up a single handed struggle against the existing abuses and projudices.

After the annihilation in 1825 of the Janissaries, a military corps which had effectually opposed any kind of change and any betterment for generations, the course of progress became more and more rapid.

The dev of modern Turkey as measured by its Press, Emin, near DR 571. y3



Origins of Young Turks


The impression of the people as to any government measure is very often true. The people are like children for unerring instinct in penetrating shams. Hence l was interested in the views of an intelligent Turk on the change of system implied in the substitution of the new office of Prime Minister for the ancient office of Grand Vezier. He said: it is really nothing new. it is the foreign translation of Turkish title of grand Vezir. Our government thinks the foreign title may be themost lucky just now !........l happen toknow that Hamdi Pasha, the late Grand Vezire, telegraphed to a friend two days before his own overthrow, -We have changed our policy. This may be taken to mean anything; but if it referred, as seems likely, to the substitution of a Prime Minister for a Grand Vezir, we have the pleasing spectacle of the last of the Grand Vezirs calmly plotting his own overthrow and semi-exile as Governor of Aidin, in order that Europe might be dazzled by the spectacle of a - free constitutional government - erected on the ruins of his own absolutism....The new ministers are not, by any means, new men. The same old names turn up once more.....

Henry O. Dwight, (1881), Turkish Life in War Time, Charles Scriber's Sons, (Articles compiled from New York Tribune), p 224


The bureau of the press exercises despotic functions in the best of times and in these war times it is rarely that a newspaper dares indulge in editorial comments. There are 18 daily newspapers published in the city, besides seven weeklies and semi-weeklies. Of these papers 4 are official organs of the government. The languages of the newspapers of Constantinople are English, French, Turkish, Greek, Armenian, Spanish and Bulgarian. The Turkish newspapers are printed some with arabic letters, some with Armenian letters, and some with Greek letters. lt is an odd circumstance that there are in Turkey both Armenians and Greeks in large numbers who have lost their own language, but use their own alphabet to write the Turkish which is their vernacular. A real curiosity is the Spanish newspaper, which is printed in Hebrew letters for the Jews.


Henry O. Dwight, (1881), Turkish Life in War Time, Charles Scriber's Sons, (Articles compiled from New York Tribune).







Even before they had acquird the power and the autonomy to transform their society, the Unionists introduced new methods into politics. The restoration of the constitution had been marked by an explosion of popular sentiment for the new regime. Some of this may have been spontaneous, but much of it was organized by the Unionists wherever it had its clubs. Thereafter, organized crowds and mass meetings, addressed by popular figures in the Committee, such as Huseyin Cahid, the fournalist, Riza Teufik the philosopher, or Halide Edip, the feminist novelist, soon came to play an important role in the political activity of the Unionists. This was especially true during crises and in a wartime.

The Unionists (Young Turks) used urban masses for the first time when they organized boycotts against Austria's annexationist policies and Greece's union with Crete. Later during Balkan Wars, organised demonstrations were used to keep off balance agovenrment hostile to the Unionists.

Bernard Lewis, History writing & Natural Revival in Turkey, Middle Eastern Affairs, Vol 4 (1953)
Serif Maudin, The Genesis of Young Ottoman Thought (Princeton Univ. Press, 1962)
Feroz Ahmad, (1969), The Young Turks, Oxford , Clarendon





...........Thus on the eve of 1908, all the Young Turks Associations were united around one common purpose, to end the despotic rule of Sultan Abdulhamid and reinforce the Constitution. This was achieved, with the support of the Balkan population, with comparatively little bloodshed on July 23, 1908, and the Sultan reinstated the Constitution the bi-Cameral Parliament, and all the freedoms - amidst the unprecedented enthusiasm and joy of the population.
The intellegentsia had finally succeeded in defeating the Sultan, and the army had played the decisive role as the chief agent of modernization. The intelligentsia in power came from the lower middle classes. Talat Pasha, the most famous of the Young Turks, was a post office clerk of humble origin. The Union and Progress, which until 1908 was a political association .........suddenly found itself called upon to administer the country.
By Kemal H. Karpat, Turkey's Politics, Princeton Univ. Press, (1959)



......The Young Persians had in many respects a history similar to that of the Young Turks. They were for the most part members of influential families, who had been educated in Europe, or had been sent into exile. Young Turks, Young Persians, Young Egyptians, Young lndians, Young Chinese have shown to Europe and America the peril - and the pity - of our western and christian education, when it is given to eastern and non-christian students. They are born into the intellectual life with our ideas and are inspired by our ideals, but have none of the back ground, none of the inheritance of our national atmosphere and family training......................Their disillusionment is bitter. ....Educated in our universities, they return to their countries to conspire against us. The illiterate and simple oriental who has never travelled, is frequently the model of fidelity and loyalty and afection .....but no educated non-christian oriental, who has travelled and studied and lived on terms of equality with Europeans and Americans can ever be a sincere friend. The common result of social contact and intellectual companionship is that he becomes a foe, - and conceds the fact. Familiarity has bred more than contempt.
By Herbert Adams Gibbons, The New Map of Europe 1911-14, the Century Co., (1918)



...Participation of certain elites in reform - A careful look at elites Ulema attitudes towards the legislative and institutional reforms has found that the elements of class struggle within the Ulema Corps outlines a social gulf between the highest ulema families, whose power, influence and wealth were passed on from generation to generation, and the humble theological student (softa), of provincial origin. The class struggle among the Ottoman ulama has not been adequately studied. The fact that significant proportion of the highest ulama supported reform, and did so not simply from a position of dependence on the sultans favour, but from the conviction that any means to ensure the survival of the empire was ultimately justifiable.

Davidson breaks with prior historians in his judgement that Tanzimat statesmen (reformers)were sincere in their attempts to legislate equality between Muslim and non-Muslim. ln the context of the changing Ottoman state of the 19th century, he sees this effort as part of the process by which Ottoman subjects, grouped into corporate identities in varied relationships to the state, were to be redefined as individuals sharing equally in the rights and duties of citizenship.

Albert Hourani in 1906 turned the spotlight full on the neglected Muslem town-dwellers of the empire. ln the process he established a category, urban notables, and named a type of politics the politics of notables, which have proved of lasting value to historians of the Ottoman provinces and the successor states in the period from the 18th century to the mid-twentieth century. The urban notable was a man of local prominence who occupied an intermediary position betwen the distant power of lstanbul and local society. As a man of property and substance, he was interested in maintaining the status quo. Hence he remained loyal to a government that guaranteed the customs of the country and served, when necessary, as a conduit for its power. As a man of local standing and leadership he hoped to keep governmental interference at bay and voiced, when unavoidable or when useful to himself, his clients interests to the central government. The legislative and administrative reforms emanating from lstanbul throughtout the 19th century which aimed at the centralization of power and the breakdown of corporate identities tended to encroach on the urban notable's range of independence action...................Outright of loss of political control was put off until the occupation of lstanbul after the First WWar, ....the Young Turks convinced that he empire could not survive without a European protector, managed finally to sign an alliance with Germany on the eve of the First WW. Despite great economic hardship, the war gave the empire new opportunities for freedom of action, 'the Turks were finally masters of their house'.

The Young Turk policies of the war years - the forays into mass political mobilization economic planning, new social services and the encouragement of women in the labour force - laid the foundations, both social and psychological, for the creation of citizenry that had been the goal of the 19th century reforms all along.

Any sample of Turkish opinion in the Tanzimat period must include the one group which was forward-looking, politically conscious, constatnly vocal, and therefore influential out of proportion to its small size. This was the New Ottoman Committee, composed principally of writers and would be reformers who for a short time in the late 1860s coalesced into the nearest approximation to a political party that existed in the empire. lts members were an exraordinary collection of individualists. They quarrelled among themselves but were united in their ardent desire to preserve the Ottoman Empire. This group has often been called the Young Turks. lts members were, in fact, the spiritual fathers of the true Young Turks of 1908, and spiritual grandfathers of the Turks who created the nationalist republic of today.

New Ottoman patriotism meant an equal cooperation of peoples of all creeds in a devoted effort to preserve the empire, but opposition to any special concessions to Christians. Most of them seem to have believed in Muslim Turkish superiority among the united peoples of a united empire. Sometimes, therefore, their writings seem self-contradictory.

Albert Hourani, Mary Wilson, Philip Khoury (eds), (1993), The Modern Middle East, l.B.Tauris and Co Ltd, London, New York








........Because of manipulation of public opinion many people saw the sultan as the hero of the situation. Even though the Union Party leaders did not trust him, they did not feel able to remove him. Even less did they feel able to take the reins of government into their own hands. Age and seniority were very important preconditions for authority in Ottoman society and the Young Turks, Being for the most part captains and majors or minor bureaucrats in their late twenties and early thirties, had neither. The committee therefore chose to leave politics in the hands of the existing cabinet under Grand Vizier Sait Pasha. ln the meantime it set itself up as a watchdog with a mission to guard the new found constitutional freedom, interfering in politics whenever it saw fit. ........Generally, the Union branches consisted of a coalition of professionals (teachers, lawyers, doctors), Muslim merchants and guild leaders and large landowners. While it was almost exclusively muslim and largely Turkish, it actively sought the cooperation of the other nationalities, guaranteeing them a number of seats in the new parliament. Eventually, Turks held slightly over 50 percent of the 288 seats.

ln the following years the position of Union Party as a secret society exerting pressure and holding political power without any formal responsibility was to prove a destabilising factor.

......ln spite of their complete victory, the Unionist's influence remained indirect rather then direct, because in many parts of the empire they had to rely on local notables who allowed their names to be put forward as condidates on the Union list, rather than on members of the Union Party itself....Erik, J. Zurcher, Turkey, 1993, l.B. Tauris Co Ltd, London, New York


Thus, Shaw suggests, just as the traditional schools had cut young Jews off from Ottoman society by teaching only Hebrew, the modern schools were doing the same by emphasising French rather than Turkish. ln that sense, the Tanzimat not succeed in making non-Muslims loyal to the empire. The way the Tanzimat affected the Muslim Turkish-speaking population was that of the Young Ottomans, who came to prominence in the late Tanzimat period of 1867-78. They were the first organised opporsition group from the Ottoman intelligensia to use the ideas of the Englightenment and attempt to synthesize modernisation with lslam. They were also the first Ottoman group to use the media as means of spreading their ideology. Most of them were from the translators office of the Foreign Ministry and thus were from that small segment of society who were in close contact with idea from the West. However, in their actions and writings a sense of frustration at their inability to rise up the bureaucratic ladder is evident.

ln many ways, they shared similar outlooks to the ruling elites they criticized so strongly. The Young Ottoman mentor Sinasi was intellectually closer to their sworn enemy Ali Pasha than he was to Young Ottomans.

The crucial difference between their views and those of the great bureaucrats, like their arch-enemy was their re-emphasis on lslam as an essential component of Ottoman society. The argument was that the ideological vacuum resulting from the pushing back of religion from the public to the private sphere was one of the main weaknesses of the Tanzimat. There was attempt to produce a synthesis between modernisation and lslam by looking for lslamic references for parliaments and representative government.

Hugh Poulton, (1997) Top Hat, Gray Wolf and Crescent; New York University Press



First modern general census of Otoman Empire was to be carried out at 1830-31. Ulema were appointed to head many of the regional teams in order to dispel the suspicions of the people.

Valuable services rendered by Ulemas in connection with taking revolutionary measures against deseases such as plagues and chlorea - since the popular religion belief in predestination prevented people in taking any precautions against contagious diseases whcih from time to time caused havoc among the population of the Ottoman Empire. *ln 1812, for example, over 70,000 people were estimated to have died from plague in lstanbul and the vicinity alone.* The importance of the liberal attitude ofthe Ulema of higher level and their cooperation with the government helped to overcome the opposition among the people and the lower Ulema who were the cause of frequent unrest.

..................Saturday the oldest inhabitants of the city were brought to naught by the vain effort to recall another such rain as descended upon us. The waters from the hills could not run off in the sewers, and poured down the slopes into the lower parts of the city. The streets were flooded from curb to curb, and in many places the sidewalks also were under water. l was obliged to wade in a roaring torrent more than knee-deep, in one of the great thoroughfares. Lines were stretched along the streets to enable people to keep their feet. Carriages could not stem the tide, for great blocks of stone came roaring down th ehills and smasshed their wheels. Two men were carried away and drowned in the street. Many small houses were also swept away. There is, howeer, this compensation,that he street dogs were carried off too. The storm lasted for five or six hours, and in the evening the gas works suddenly went down, and Pera and Galata were left in darkness. Houses here commonly use candles or petroleum, but the streets and the shops are lighted with gas, and in the Sultan's palace there is nothing but gas. Hence the sudden destruction of the gasometer produced the wildest panic within the sacred precincts of the palace. A plot, an insurrection, a Russian attack, might all have produced less fear than did this wild riot of the waters. Outside was the roar of waters dashing against the doors of the palace, the shouts of sailors, whose ships were dragging their anchors, the hiss of escaping steam, and nearer the rapid shouts of command, as the guardturned out to resist whatever might come. .......Every night placards are posted by discontented Turks upon the doors of the mosques, and the Government is greatly annoyed because it cannot detect the authors of these seditious documents. The placards are commonly aimed at grand Vazir, but hints also for changes in yet higher quarters. So far the discontent survives every attempt to crush it..........

Henry O. Dwight, (1881), Turkish Life in War Time, Charles Scriber's Sons, (Articles compiled from New York Tribune).

Remarks

As a woman l have no country.
As a woman l want no country.
As a woman my country is the whole world.

Three Guineas by Virginia Woolf: Gurdian, 26 Sept. 2007



Those who oppress you, first have to dehumanise you,
which is how they maintain power over you........................




On ldentity


History is an important aspect of personal and group identity, which is why mass immigration and the creation of a multi-ethnic/multicultural society have undermined "our" sense of national identity.

Notwithstanding the existence of a few black individuals and communities going back a long way, essentially the history of these islands (which cannot be separated from that of Europe as a whole) is "hideously white" (and Christian).

Where is the "we" the "us" and the "our" ("our" history and prehistory, "our" ancestors, "our" shared values and beliefs, "our" shared culture) in the multi-mass society of modern Britain?

It seems to me that all "we" have in common (apart from our eminently important shared humanity, of course, which, however, we share with everyone on the planet) is our shared dependency on and interest in exploiting "our" British citizenship.

In order to do this "we" have to maintain the myth of "British identity", which was relatively easy in the past, but not any longer.

"British identity" is revealing itself for what it really is (and always has been): a cloak (once a lavish garment, but now increasingly threadbare), beneath which lie the power structures of the state, the original and primary purpose of which (perfectly understandable from an evolutionary/Darwinian perspective) was, and essentially still is, the exploitation of society by its most powerful and privileged elites and individual members.

http://www.spaceship-earth.org

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,2185468,00.html





Taking responsibility

.............the incredible inhumanity in Africa and the fact that Africa is probably the only place that needs another Biblical deluge without a Noah’s ark.

This ........is just another message out of Africa that shows the brutality, rape, murder, enormous inhumanity of Africa......... tired of hearing about hopeful women and children: the one thing Africa needs is to always acknowledge their history and examine it, re-examine it over and over and over.

The greatest obstacle to change in Africa is how Africans justify their history, their attitudes towards many injustices, as “tribal” or even “cultural.” Have you guys heard that South Africa is not only the rape capital of the world, but that many women justify it on “tribal” customs? Why do we bother telling Africans about gender, social and economic justice when they have their competing ideas, ideas that generally see violence as fair punishment and are generally scornful of “Western” justice?

Africa’s everyone pity case and everyone likes to rant on and on about it. Have any of you actually tried working for a health or grassroots organization, only to find that Africans treat women like sexual garbage and African women will not ever defend sexual victims? It makes everyone who tries to “save” Africa look like they are very much in the wrong place.

Africa needs to always, always be held accountable for its history. History in every sense: not just national, but local, everything from what happened a year ago to yesterday. Women need to report rape, bodies need to be accounted for and graves must be built. Countries CANNOT wipe out their history: it turns everyone into animals when they try to do so.

— Posted by G
Source: When history repeats itself, New York Times, 10 Oct. 2007

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Explanation of relations

Historians and social scientists seems interested in resolving different and important aspects of our understanding of intl. relations. Perhaps the competition revolves around confusion over what each is interested in accomplishing, and in particular what the role of the scientific method is in understanding history and future intl. affairs.

They both share a common interest in the context, sequence, and meaning of events. They differ, however, in the emphasis placed on and the interpretation of context, sequence, and meaning. And of course historians and social scientists differ in the methods used to evaluate evidence and to reach conclusions.

Historians, perhaps, often are primarily interested in explanations that emphasize particularistic factors that distinguish one event, one sequence, one location from another. The meaning or explanation of events and actions assumed to be revealed through culturally and temporally bounded interpretations. Such perspective naturally draws the scholar towards close examination of particular events or actions.

The historians focus on particularistic factors inspires the belief that little can be gained from explanations rooted in conjectures about motives for actions that are quite general, if not universal. A common or perhaps correct claim is made, that medieval social, political and economic relations cannot be understood through the applications of modern notions of individual interests or welfare maximisation.

Here, the differences between social scientists and historians is rather explicit. Social scientists do not deny the relevance of cultural, temporal, or contextual considerations as means to understand past or future events; rather such factors are embedded within theoretical constructs in which they serve as variables. They are more concerned with how variables relate to each other than with explaining particular events or actions. Social science emphasises the causation behind recurrent phenomena, and its general explanations while historical analysis seems more to emphasise the particular agents of causation for singular events.

For the social scientist the events of history are laboratory in which to test their claims about how variables are associated with each other, to test their theoretical propositions about causation. As such, his task is to identify relations among critical variables that explain classes of events or phenbomena not merely explain particular event...............

Historians emphasize discourse, meaning, context, and complexity; internal validity, if you will. Social scientists tend to emphasize regularities, replications and parsimony, external validity, if you will.

Source: Ngaire Wood, 1996, Explaining lnternational Relations since 1945, OUP






Political Economy

Market, constitutes a powerful source of sociopolitical change and produce equally powerful responses as societies attempt to protect themselves against market forces (Polanyi, 1957). ln varying degrees, economic interdependence establishes hierarchical dependency, and power relations among groups and national societies in the abstract world of economists.

Karl Polanyi, 1957, The great transformation: the political and economic origins of our times, Boston: Beacon Press

The real world is a universe of exclusive and frequently conflicting loyalites and political boundries in which the division of labour and the distribution of its benefits are determined as much by power and good fortune as they are by the laws of the market and the operation of the price mechanism.

The tensions and interactions between politicsand the economy constitue the stuff of polştşcal economy. Politcs, and the market do not exists independently of each other while influencing one another in various measures.

Adam Smith used political economy to mean what is called the science of economics, and what some see as methodology of formal economics, with a rational actor model, to all types of human behaviour. A unified methodology or theory of political economy would requre a general comprehension of hte process of social change, including the ways in which the social, economic and political aspects of society interact.

Political economy examines the interaction of the state and the market as the embodiment of politics and economies in the modern world.

Ref:
John Lewis Gaddes, 1982, strategies of containement - A critical appraisal of powstwar America National SecurityPolicy:Oxford Univ Press
Richard Cooper, 1985, Economic interdependence and coordination of Economic plicies, in Jones and Kenen, Vol 2, Chapter 23
Harry, G. Johnson, 1965, The world economy at the cross roads: A survey of current problems of money, trade, and economic development , New York, Oxford Univ Press

Adam Smith and 19th century liberals were the economic reformers of their era. ln international political economy, advocates of free trade and free markets are still referred to as liberals. ln 21 century American politics, it appears that the term carries just the opposite meaning. ln US, conservatives generally support free markets and less governmental intervention, while liberals advocate greater governmental intervention in the market to stimulate growth and smooth out inequalities. These contrary uses of the term liberal may seam confusing.

Discredited with the rise of liberalism in the 19th century, Realism, starting with advocators such as Thomas Hobbes, re-emerged as an important perspective only in the aftermath of the Great Depression of the 1930s, as scholars sought to understand the causes of wide spread economic warfare of begger-thy-neighbor policies initiated in 1929. Realists believe that nation-states pursue power and shape the economy to this end, they percieve politics as determining economics. Realist political economy, thus, is concerned with changes of international power affecting the form and type of international economy.

David A. Lake, and Geoffrey Frieden, lnternational Politics and lntl. economics, Lynne Rienner publishers, 2003
ief

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Living alongside trees

The moderating effect of large-leafed trees can reduce energy consumption of nearby buildings. As well as their beauty, they improve air quality by trapping pollution, they slow down rainfall, reduce noise pollution, provide shade and encourage healthy lifestyles, he says. And studies in the US suggest they increase emotional well-being.

"Trees are living creatures and sometimes in cities we forget that we have to live alongside them.

"If someone complains there is a crack in the street, they say it has everything to do with the tree and nothing to do with the Victorian drains.


"The tree will come down because of the threat of a lawsuit against the council because even if they lose, it will cost a lot of money."

Even without evidence of a link, the tree comes down as a preventive measure,... there is added pressure on trees "below street" from gas, electricity, water and cable television.

As these big landscape trees are lost, what is being planted in their place are so-called "lollipop trees", which are less of a threat to properties but don't have the same benefits in terms of biodiversity, clean air and conveying a sense of well-being.


Source:By Tom Geoghegan, BBC News Magazine
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7009951.stm

Friday, September 21, 2007

More On Common Sense

Statistics are accepted so uncritically by people with no real intention of being dishonest. It's much more difficult to debunk a lie when it has no liars in its origins.

Here's a for instance. The Hotel and Catering Industry Training Board once asked one of their staff to perform a study into recruitment and staffing. He duly conducted a load of surveys and discovered, perhaps interestingly, that a large number of graduates were working as hotel porters. This, of course, was mainly because they were going on to do post-graduate academic work and were earning a bit of easy money over Summer or during a gap year or while studying. But the thing is, that last sentence is the result of common sense, not statistical analysis; it is the result of criticising, not accepting, a perfectly true statistic that makes too little sense. The HCITB employee in question didn't do this; he simply stuck all his data through his stats rules and presented his conclusions to the board, recommending, among other things, a vigorous graduate recruitment program to meet the industry's needs for hotel porters over the coming years. For this, he was rightly fired. True story.

A lot more damage is done to the reputation of the discipline of statistics by this common failure to factor in the thought that what you're measuring is usually too messy to be measured in the way you'd like.

Source: http://www.squandertwo.net/blog/2007/09/
lies-damn-lies-and-bloody-idiots.htm




Competition Law and Policy

Market Structure and barriers to entry

• Absolute advantages
• Strategic advantages

– Exclusionary behaviour.
– Efficiency v Artificial barriers.
– Legal and regulatory barriers
– Intellectual property rights:
– Superior Technology and ‘first move advantage




• The geographical market

‘A relevant geographic market comprises the area in which the undertakings concerned are involved in the supply or demand of product and services, in which the conditions of competition are sufficiently homogeneous and which can be distinguished from neighbouring areas because the conditions of competition are appreciably different in those areas.’ (Notice on market definition)





• The product market

‘A relevant product market comprises all those products and/or services which are regarded as interchangeable or substitutable by the consumer, by reason of the products’ characteristics, their prices and their intended use’
(Notice on market definition)

Source: FHS: Competition Law and Policy
Introduction to Competition Law and Policy & Antitrust Economics

Making a Livelihood

You can persecute and browbeat a man, you can bully him and do him physical injury, you can refuse him a share in the government and put him in an inferior social position, and he will continue to endure it. But rob him of the chance of making a livelihood, and he will commence to conspire against the government.

Herbert Adams Gibbons, The New Map of Europe 1911-14, the Century Co., (1918)

Friday, September 14, 2007

Unconventional wisdom

The state of US-China trade relations: China keeps selling cheap stuff to the US, the US isn't selling so much to China (but plenty to other parts of the world). The Americans are demanding that the Chinese charge more, and the Chinese are refusing.

Source: The Undercover Economist by Tim Harford (Exeter College, Oxford), Financial Times, 10 Dec 2005



Different phases

Doing is part of learning only when it is directed by ideas.


lncreasing research attention is being directed towards the negative side of social interactions.


ln the beginning of the 20th century men were every where unconscious of the rate at which the world was growing. lt required the convulsion of the War to awaken the nations to the knowldege of their strength, for a year after the War had begun hardly anyone understood how terrific, how almost inexhaustible were the resources in force, in substance, in virtue, behind every one of the combatants. The vials of wrath were full: but so were the reservoirs of power.
The RT Hon Churchill, The World Crisis, 1928



The movement arose, as was natural, in the defeated countries. Their peoples seemed to have nothing more to lose. They were experiencing a misery so unprecedented that the possible miseries of the future had little terror of them. Despair and cynicism had destroyed all restraining influences.



History teaches us that some notorious, and indeed most cruel dictators came to power through elections. Yusuf Kanli, Turkish daily newspaper, 14 Sept 2007


Adam Smith declared that the countenance and behaviour of those we live with ....is the only looking glass by which we can, in some measure with the eyes of other people, scrutinise the propriety of our conduct (quoted in Bryson, 1945).



More on common sense

The Hotel and Catering Industry Training Board once asked one of their staff to perform a study into recruitment and staffing. He duly conducted a load of surveys and discovered, perhaps interestingly, that a large number of graduates were working as hotel porters. This, of course, was mainly because they were going on to do post-graduate academic work and were earning a bit of easy money over Summer or during a gap year or while studying. But the thing is, that last sentence is the result of common sense, not statistical analysis; it is the result of criticising, not accepting, a perfectly true statistic that makes too little sense. The HCITB employee in question didn't do this; he simply stuck all his data through his stats rules and presented his conclusions to the board, recommending, among other things, a vigorous graduate recruitment program to meet the industry's needs for hotel porters over the coming years. For this, he was rightly fired. True story.

A lot more damage is done to the reputation of the discipline of statistics by this common failure to factor in the thought that what you're measuring is usually too messy to be measured in the way you'd like. See also the profoundly held belief among too many statisticians that the effects of intentional acts can be measured in the same way as the effects of blind chance.
Source: WWW.adamsmith.org/blog
http://www.squandertwo.net/blog/2007/09/
lies-damn-lies-and-bloody-idiots.htm




.....next accosted a rather frail woman in her 50s, Elsa Ruff, from San Francisco. She said she was still trying to recover from a family tragedy three years ago. She had discovered that on long walks she had a sense that her deceased son was with her. Elsa seemed awfully frail for this ordeal. I asked her if she was afraid of highway robbers. "I'm not afraid of anything now," she said. "I lived in New York in the 1960s. I've been mugged by professionals."
Michael Johnson, Meanwhile: The Way of St. James, Herald Tribune, Sept 13

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Learning theory

The complex nature of cultural adaptability demonstrate an integrative feature that is organized around change of perception, acquiring contextual knowledge and establishing professional skills. Dennis et al (1989) defined cultural competence (adaptability) as a set of congruent behaviours, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency, or among professionals and enable them to work effectively in cross-cultural situations. Davies (1997) pointed out to the transformational knowledge about people for practitioners, to achieve cultural competence, that is appropriate for specific standards, policies, practices and attitudes in interventions and capacity buildings. Taylor (1994) adopted Mezirow's framework of transformative learning to examine how expatriate adults develop adaptive strategies and adjust their perspective in host cultures. Transformational learning theory in adult eduction emphasizes that through critical self-examination, adults sometimes experience a significant transformation of their perspective to respond to important events or difficult stages in their lives, which is because the theory involves new or revised interpretation of the meaning of one's expereince.


Ref.:
Dennis, K., et al (1989), Cultural competence in psychiatric nursing: have you asked the right questions? Journal of American psychiatric nurses association, 8(6) 183-187
Davis K., 1997, Exploring the intersection between cultural competency and managed behavioural health care policy: lmplication for state and county mental health agencies
Mezirow, (2000), Learning to think like an adult. in Learning as transformation, Jossey-Bass
Taylor, E.W. (1994), lntercultural competency, : A transformative learning process, Adult Education Quarterly, 44(3), 154-174




A study exploring how new learners of foreign language develop an understanding of a second or other culture, it was found that a literary text was more effective in developing culture competence than wasa fact based approach (Scott & Huntington, 2002). Litrary texts can help student develop cognitive flexibility and affective awareness, hence making connections with target culture. That is happening at the early stages of language learning, when they can gain insight into the expressive and cultural nuances of target language. Comparisons were made for new learners interpreting a literary text both in small as well as crowded groups.


Source: Viginia Scott & Julie Huntington; Literature, the interpretive mode, and novice learners; The Modern Language Journal, Vol 91, Nıo 1, Spring 2007

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

lrrationality

Rational Irrationality: A Framework for the Neoclassical-Behavioral Debate
Published in the Eastern Economic Journal 26(2), Spring 2000, pp.191-211.

Abstract:

Critics of behavioral economics often argue that apparent irrationality arises mainly because test subjects lack adequate incentives; the defenders of behavioral economics typically reply that their findings are robust to this criticism. A simple theoretical model of "rational irrationality" is represented to clarify this debate, reducing the neoclassical-behavioral dispute to a controversy over the shape of agents' wealth/irrationality indifference curves. Many experimental anomalies are consistent with small deviations from polar "neoclassical" preferences, but even mildly relaxing standard assumptions about preferences has strong implications. Rational irrationality can explain both standard, costly biases, as well as wealth-enhancing irrationality, but it remains inconsistent with evidence that intensifying financial incentives for rationality makes biases more pronounced.

When Is Two Better than One?: How Federalism Mitigates and Intensifies Imperfect Political Competition
Published in the Journal of Public Economics 80(1), April 2001, pp.99-119.

Abstract:


Power-maximizing politicians' behavior model is subject to imperfect political competition and perfect citizen mobility - analyzing the welfare implications of federal and non-federal structures. The model abstracts from both heterogeneous preferences (the most common argument in favor of federalism) and externalities (the most common argument against), showing that even in this simplified setting federalism has important welfare implications. There is one class of equilibria in which more federalism has the purely beneficial effect of offsetting imperfections in the political process. However, there is also a second class of equilibria in which citizen mobility makes political imperfections more severe by creating "safe districts" for both political parties.



Rational Ignorance vs. Rational Irrationality
Published in Kyklos 54(1), 2001, pp.3-26.

Abstract:

Beliefs about politics and religion often have three puzzling properties: systematic bias, high certainty, and little informational basis. The theory of rational ignorance (Downs 1957) explains only the low level of information. The current paper presents a general model of "rational irrationality," which explains all three stylized facts. According to the theory of rational irrationality, being irrational - in the sense of deviating from rational expectations - is a good like any other; the lower the private cost, the more agents buy. A peculiar feature of beliefs about politics, religion, etc. is that the private repercussions of error are virtually nonexistent, setting the private cost of irrationality at zero; it is therefore in these areas that irrational views are most apparent. The consumption of irrationality can be optimal, but it will usually not be when the private and the social cost of irrationality differ - for example, in elections.



Has Leviathan Been Bound? A Theory of Imperfectly Constrained Government with Evidence from the States
Published in the Southern Economic Journal 67(4), April 2001, pp.825-847.

Abstract:

This paper develops a formal theory that combines power-maximizing "Leviathan" political parties with well-defined imperfections in the political process. The model implies that both parties tend to make government larger as their likelihood of electoral victory increases. Empirical tests on state-level data confirm this prediction. Racing the Leviathan hypothesis against alternatives theories of party motivation indicates that both the Leviathan and the "contrasting ideologies" views have some degree of validity.

Source: http://www.gmu.edu/departments/
economics/bcaplan/econ.html

Friday, September 07, 2007

Assumptions

We should probe the space around us in exactly the same fashion as to study a surface, by following direct paths, making measurements, and recoding what we find, free from any preconceptions. What Einstein called a ‘thought experiment'; an experiment devised and carried out in our imagination. We can say a few word about the nature of thought experiments and their important role in understanding the physical world. A good example of the role of thought experiments is the 'law of inertia', first formulated by Galileo and later adopted by Newton as the first of the three famous ‘Newton’s laws’ of physics. Galileo had carefully observed and measured the motion of objects under various conditions, and finally concluded that the correct description was the exact opposite of the standard 'dogma' that had been accepted for almost two thousand years. That 'dogma', promulgated by Aristotle, stated that a force was needed to maintain motion, and when the force was removed. The motion stopped.

Galileo asserted that the motion would go on forever unless a 'force' was exerted to stop it. The Aristotelian belief was able to hold sway for so long for the simple reason that no actual experiment could be devised to verify Galileo’s assertion. There are always forces acting on an object: gravity, friction, and the force exerted by the earth on a falling object at the moment it hits, to name a few. Galileo had to imagine a situation in which all those forces were removed, and he concluded that under those circumstances an object would continue moving in the same direction at the same speed indefinitely. The importance of this thought experiment cannot be overstated, it allowed 'Newton' to put forces back into the picture in his second and third laws and to state the exact effect they would have on the motion of an object. As a result, the 'qualitative' description of the 'physical world' given by Aristotle was replaced by 'Newton’s precise quantitative' statements in the form of simple mathematical equations that became the basis of all of modern physics.




Uncovered

When ever John had need, therefore, of putting fear in the infidels' hearts, he should entertain the proposal for the council to effect the union of the churches. But since Manuel could see no hope of the Greeks ever finding spiritual peace and understanding with the Latins, John should never risk the parlous venture into actual union, for it would prove impossible and 'l fear lest an even worse schism may result - and then look! we have left ourselves uncovered to the infidels'.

At all events it was not prevailing spirit, and (as many a schoolboy knows or used to know) the union of the churches was in fact proclaimed, and with rare unanimity.


Setton, M. K., The Papacy and the Levant 11(1204 - 1571), The American Philosophical society, 1978, p. 58




The secret of the Hittites

The discovery of the Hittites has been an unusually stirring adventure of the human spirit. ln slightly more than a century a people of whom nothing but a name was known has become an integral part of the history of our civilization. Much still remains to be learned about the Empire of the Hittites, but a good beginning has been made.


Winston, Clara and Richard, (translators), The secret of the Hittites by Ceram, Publisher ex Libris, Harold and Eveline, 1955 OS66C35

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Harsh rays of reality

As Shapiro puts it economic theory has developed a perverse sense of rigor where the dread of being thought insufficiently scientific spawns a fear of not flying among young scholars.

The result is that the models take no account of real human behaviour which is far too messy to permit any theorems that can be proved regorously. So economic models become citadels of crystalline mathematical perfection that would shatter if touched by the harsh rays of reality.

The famous segregation model of economist Thomas Schelling, who pioneered the agent based modelling ABM, approach in the 1970s, showed that a high degree of social segregation does not, as one might assume, imply extreme intolerance. Conversely and relevant to today's political climate, it showed that a combination of mobility and choice may amplify marginal preferences or imbalances into major social divisions.

Agent-based models may not describe reality, but they can show how interaction and nonlinearity produce social outcomes that could not be predicted simply by inspecting the behavioural rules. They undermine the common political presumption that group behaviour is a multiplied version of individual behaviour.

They expose how ideas such as market efficiency may mutate from predictions of simplistic theories into dogmas that are applied insistently to the real economy. They might not tell us why certain social phenomena happen, but they offer mechanisms for how they might.

The challenge which cannot be over emphasized, is to ensure that ABM does not get above its station. lt is tool not just another method for imprinting belief and prejudice with the false authority of 'theory'. As such these models could form part of a toolbox that helps social scientists to reengage with reality rather than trying to reinvent it.

Ball, P., Nature, Vol 448 Aug 2007


Power relations

Markets are conventionally distinguished from institutions. But markets are constituted through them. The market is never neutral or 'natural' - never 'God', and can be a 'prison', in the words of one panellist. Empirically-rooted work is needed on how markets express power relations embedded in a range of social structures, ideologies and norms. Phenomena such as product up-grading and industrial clusters can work for equity or the reverse depending often on the kinds of social networks and identities being constructed through them. Social norms and the need for ontological security may lead to complicity with oppressive structures and a reluctance to exert agency.

REPORT TO DFID ORGANISED BY BARBARA HARRISS-WHITE, New Development Threats and Promises, QEH 50th Anniversary Conference, July 2005, Oxford



There is a call for scientists to do a better job of communicating science to the public and media, that urges researchers to stop pretending that they are nothing but objective 'fact machines' and to instead give more general interpretations of their results and put them into a broader context.

Mooney, C., Nature, Vol 448, Aug 2007