129,318 research outputs found
Voting over economic plans
We review and provide motivation for a one-sector model of economic growth in which decisions about capital accumulation are made by a political process. If it is possible to commit for at least three periods into the future, then for any feasible consumption plan, there is a perturbation that is majority-preferred to it. Furthermore, plans that minimize the maximum vote that can be obtained against them yield a political business cycle. If it is impossible to commit, voters select the optimal consumption plan for the median voter
Supply chain temple of resilience
In March 2011, an earthquake and tsunami hit the north-eastern coastline of Japan. Honda, Toyota, Nissan and Subaru all had plants in or close to the affected region, and were forced to close them
On an Argument of David Deutsch
We analyse an argument of Deutsch, which purports to show that the
deterministic part of classical quantum theory together with deterministic
axioms of classical decision theory, together imply that a rational decision
maker behaves as if the probabilistic part of quantum theory (Born's law) is
true. We uncover two missing assumptions in the argument, and show that the
argument also works for an instrumentalist who is prepared to accept that the
outcome of a quantum measurement is random in the frequentist sense: Born's law
is a consequence of functional and unitary invariance principles belonging to
the deterministic part of quantum mechanics. Unfortunately, it turns out that
after the necessary corrections we have done no more than give an easier proof
of Gleason's theorem under stronger assumptions. However, for some special
cases the proof method gives positive results while using different assumptions
to Gleason. This leads to the conjecture that the proof could be improved to
give the same conclusion as Gleason under unitary invariance together with a
much weaker functional invariance condition.Comment: Revision 28-7-03: added reference Final revision 28-05-04. To appear
in proceedings of "Quantum Probability and Infinite Dimensional Analysis",
Greifswald, 2003; World Scientifi
A Review of the Genus \u3ci\u3eGryllus\u3c/i\u3e (Orthoptera: Gryllidae), With a New Species From Korea
Gryllus is the most widely distributed genus of the Tribe Gryllini, and may be the largest; it includes 69 described species occupying most of the New World, Africa, and Europe, and much of Asia. A new species from Korea significantly extends the known range of the genus
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