From Mises Blog 2006:

Don’t worry–you don’t exist: Or, why long-range planning is really impossible

November 6, 2006 by

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I previously blogged about one of the papers by attorney Peter Jenkins. Now, from the “uhhhhh…. HO-kay” files comes his latest, in the Journal of Futures Studies, Historical Simulations – Motivational, Ethical and Legal Issues. Abstract:

A future society will very likely have the technological ability and the motivation to create large numbers of completely realistic historical simulations and be able to overcome any ethical and legal obstacles to doing so. It is thus highly probable that we are a form of artificial intelligence inhabiting one of these simulations. To avoid stacking (i.e. simulations within simulations), the termination of these simulations is likely to be the point in history when the technology to create them first became widely available, (estimated to be 2050). Long range planning beyond this date would therefore be futile.

Shades of Douglas Adams! Forget “in the long run we are all dead”–we are just a simulation. So, no need to worry.

Update: The Universe as a Hologram: Does Objective Reality Exist, or is the Universe a Phantasm?

Update 2: Our world may be a giant hologram

Update 3: Our Universe May Be a Giant Hologram.

Update: Our Universe Is A Gigantic And Wonderfully Detailed Holographic Illussion

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The Most Visited Libertarian Websites

by Stephan Kinsella on April 11, 2012

in Austrian Economics

The Capital Free Press has compiled a list of the top ranked “libertarian websites based on the number of unique visitors in the most recent month according to the data compiled by Compete.” The post is pasted below. Not surprisingly, LewRockwell.com is the most visited libertarian site. Four of my own sites made the list: StephanKinsella.com (#84), Libertarian Papers (#100), The Libertarian Standard (#75), and Center for the Study of Innovative Freedom (C4SIF, #78).

 

The Most Visited Libertarian Websites

This is a ranking of the top libertarian websites based on the number of unique visitors in the most recent month according to the data compiled by Compete. They only compile data for domains and subdomains, so perhaps this list is more accurately described as the most visited libertarian domains rather than websites. It is compiled through calls to Compete’s API, so it will automatically update when they release new data each month. For more information on this list, see the blog post introducing it.

Automating everything means that adding a new website is as simple as plugging a new url into my list, so you have any suggestions for a website to add, please email me at patrick@capitalfreepress.com.

Due to the restrictions on the free use of the Compete API, there is a chance that I could run out of API calls in a 24 hour period (resets at midnight EST). The way that I compile this list and the terms and conditions on the use of their API prevent me from displaying the number of unique visitors for each website in the chart, though that information and more can be accessed via the link I have provided. [click to continue…]

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Cox on Holzer on Thomas and Libertarian Centralism

by Stephan Kinsella on April 6, 2012

in Uncategorized

An old LRC post about a great Stephen Cox review.

Cox on Holzer on Thomas and Libertarian Centralism

Posted by Stephan Kinsella on April 23, 2007 11:15 AM

Stephen Cox has an excellent review in the latest Liberty of Henry Mark Holzer’s recent book The Supreme Court Opinions of Clarence Thomas, 1991–2006: A Conservative’s Perspective. Cox’s review, entitled The Constitution and Its Emanations, does a good job of skewering the dishonest, confused, results-oriented libertarian critiques of Supreme Court jurisprudence; he sounds suspiciously like a decentralist libertarian, as well. Note, e.g., the distinction Cox makes between “result libertarianism” and “process libertarianism”:

My money is with the process libertarians. I believe that the practical losses one may suffer by being on their side are vastly outweighed by the practical gains. State constitutions are strong on certain individual liberties, and the federal Constitution is in most respects a model of libertarian thought. To interpret these documents fairly, giving their words the sense that their authors intended, is good for the cause of liberty, in the short term, usually, and in the long term, almost always. Granted, the First Amendment’s guarantee that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” comes far short of erecting a “wall of separation” between church and state (Thomas Jefferson’s phrase [1802], not in the Constitution). But I’m not much troubled by “In God We Trust” on our coins, or the eye of God on the Great Seal of the United States. If you are, I think you’ve got too much time on your hands.

That last line is hilarious. Also:

It is simply breathtaking, the degree to which presumed supporters of civil liberties have gone in amending the Constitution by judicial interpretation. I am, by profession, a literary historian and critic, and I know I would be laughed out of my profession if, when I interpreted texts, I took the kind of freedoms with fact and logic that judges, lawyers, and professors of law routinely take when they interpret the Constitution. To preserve some minimal reputation for honesty, I try to make my interpretations represent the meanings that are actually present in the texts I study. I realize that good authors often create intentional ambiguities, and bad authors often create unintentional ones, but I make every attempt to avoid replacing even those ambiguities with the meanings that I myself would prefer to see.

If only more con law professors had as much common sense.

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Holzer, Animal

April 6, 2012 Uncategorized

An old LRC post: Holzer, Animal Posted by Stephan Kinsella on January 19, 2006 10:41 PM Re Holzer (2, 3)–note that he’s that rare Randian, an animal rights advocate (2). So let’s see, as a Randian we can presume he is pro-abortion, believing it’s not even immoral to abort a mere “piece of protoplasm,” as [...]

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In Writing a Novel: One Coincidence Only Is Permitted

March 31, 2012 Culture

I read a comment by Buckley long ago, regarding advice he had gotten from John Braine (author of How to Write a Novel): that in writing a novel, “the reading public expects one coincidence and is cheated if it isn’t given one, but scorns two.” I’ve always thought that was brilliant. And it’s right: I [...]

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Ethan’s “Books” Haiku

February 27, 2012 Culture

My 8 year old recently brought home a few haikus he wrote at school. (A haiku is a type of Japanese poetry where you have 3 lines, with 5, 7, and 5 “on” (like a syllable); http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haiku) My favorite is “Books”: Books Books. Books. Their knowledge. Information flows through me. The knowledge of books. Others: [...]

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Daily Bell: Mr. Goldberg Apologizes for His Mises/Phone Booth Crack?

February 11, 2012 Austrian Economics

Interesting piece in The Daily Bell: Mr. Goldberg Apologizes for His Mises/Phone Booth Crack?. Apropos this, see my 2001 LRC article about this little punk, On Jonah Goldberg’s Youthful Phase.

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Lea’s Ham Sandwiches

February 9, 2012 Culture

From a LRC post in 2006: Re: Reuben deviationists Posted by Stephan Kinsella on September 12, 2006 10:18 PM Okay guys, I have to weigh in here: Sure corned beef sammiches are good (Corned Beef Academy is good, it). But if you are ever in the Philadelphia area (specifically, West Chester, in the western suburbs), [...]

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Left-libertarians and aggression: a facebook conversation

February 4, 2012 Uncategorized

From this post: Derek: “don’t know, when you define aggression a priori” I am not sure what this means. I am defining what libertarians are in terms of their view on aggression: they are against it. Aggression itself requires further explanation, definition, and justification. In my various articles I have attempted this.  E.g http://mises.org/daily/3660#ref18 . [...]

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Epstein: Does the Second Amendment Apply to Washington, D.C.?

February 2, 2012 Libertarianism

Back in 2008 I pointed out some problems with resorting to the courts of the central state to vindicate our rights, in the context of the Heller gun rights case. I argued that the Bill of Rights limits the power of the federal government. It was certainly not meant not empower the federal government via [...]

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My Amazon Author Page

February 2, 2012 Uncategorized

Is up!

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test podcast

January 25, 2012 podcast
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Taking the Ninth Amendment Seriously: A Review of Calvin R. Massey’s Silent Rights: The Ninth Amendment and the Constitution’s Unenumerated Rights

January 24, 2012 Law

Below is the text version of Taking the Ninth Amendment Seriously: A Review of Calvin R. Massey’s Silent Rights: The Ninth Amendment and the Constitution’s Unenumerated Rights [1995], 24 Hastings Const. L. Q. 757 (1997). This submitted draft version may differ slightly from version published. Taking the Ninth Amendment Seriously: Review of Calvin R. Massey, [...]

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Three Great Practical Things in my Life

January 17, 2012 Culture

I’m not talking about personal matters like getting married or having a child or having great parents. Or, intellectually, on the level of reading Mises or Hoppe or Rothbard (or meeting the latter two, for that matter). But three great practical things that stand out that have made big differences for me: Learning touch-typing in [...]

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Kinsella Podcast

January 9, 2012 Uncategorized

I’ve started a podcast on HuffDuffer (RSS; Subscribe in iTunes), which I’ll use for my past and upcoming media, and for occasional audio files by other speakers I find interesting.

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Favorite Podcast Bumper Music

December 28, 2011 Culture

I listen to a lot of podcasts and am very impressed by some of the intro/theme music (I think it’s sometimes called bumper music) they came up with. It’s such an incredible skill to me. Hear are my favorite ones, in descending order: KERA Think. Just love it. Soothing and pleasant, just the right length. [...]

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Steve Mendelsohn: The God of Death and the Death of God

December 13, 2011 Culture

My friend and former patent lawyer colleague Steve Mendelsohn sent me the essay below (Steve doesn’t have his own blog, so this is posted here with his permission). One of his other pieces is the funny “Confessions of a Law School Asshole,” published when he was a law student at U. Penn in The Penn [...]

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My Epitaph

December 12, 2011 personal

My parents’ recent selection of their tombstones got me ta thinkin’. I think the epitaph I’d like would be: Father, Husband, Libertarian.

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Hoppe’s Argumentation Ethics and Kinsella’s Estoppel Discussed in Hebrew

December 9, 2011 Uncategorized

Guy Kedem sent me a link to his article Dialogical Libertarianism: Ultimate Foundation of Ethics, which is a Hebrew-language discussion of Hoppe’s argumentation ethics and my estoppel theory of libertarian rights. For more on argumentation ethics, see my “Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide,” Mises Daily (May 27, 2011) (includes “Discourse Ethics and Liberty: [...]

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