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Tag Archives: philosophy of risk
A Bad Connection
Hang up and dial again? Five years after averting a complete financial collapse of capitalism, pop media’s assessment is to describe a disconnect between Wall Street and “the real economy.” Alluding to what is “real” is the Objectivism that dominates … Continue reading
Re-Integration of the Values
The Over-Advantaged Risk Proportion To avoid what is clearly considered the natural direction of the risk in late order, the elite must operationalize the expected values. The values are organized not to support but to resist the probable outcome. Conservative … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged big banks, conservative philosophy, consolidation of risk, cultural identity, dark pools, E-Wave probability, futures markets, imperative accountability, impulsive and corrective waves, K-Wave risk dimension, macro-risk assessment, moral hazard, natural direction, objective identity and limited liability, operant conditions, operationalized risk, over-advantaged risk proportion, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, retributive value, risk value, risk-value by assignment, self-interest
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Occupation of Space, Timing the Market
Utilizing a too-big-to-fail business plan occupies a lot of space. Occupation of so much space allows for timing the market. It makes the market so that risk can be avoided, leaving it for the crowd who, by definition, otherwise occupy … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged attribution error, business cycle, false induction, gamma risk, integral and derivative value, occupation of policy space, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, practical philosophy, retributive value, risk dimension, risk of liability, risk transfer, risk value, risk-reward
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What You Make is What You Take
America’s first treasury secretary envisioned a risk-control model that operationalized the expected value of elite authority with the expected value of its resistance. The time was right to fuse opposing values, conserving the fully assumed risk of loss by resisting … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged business cycle, consolidation of risk value, debt proportion, existential identity, extension of rents, Hamiltonianism, legitimate authority, method yield, monetizing, national bank, operational expectation, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, psychology and technical analysis, record profits, risk control, risk dimension, risk modeling, risk-prone indicators
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When the Price is Right
In a free market, everything is legitimately priced on demand. The price to be paid is not dictated but discovered. Buyers and sellers come together, freely engaged in commerce to discover risk beyond the dimension of avoiding it. We learn … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged corporate identity, economic dimension, economic rent, empirical ethics, expected value, free markets, government, Hamiltonianism, iron law, limited liability, micro dimension, monopoly, natural philosophy, null hypothesis, Objectivism, on-demand legitimacy, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, price disovery, probable risk management, quantum risk value, risk dimension, risk ontology, social contract
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Objective Identity
Philosophy is the great adventure of infinite possibility, but limited probability, busy as we are nullifying the possible, verifying the probable. The Logical Condition Psychologists tell us that reality is subjective. Everyone perceives the same object differently. We have varying … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged behavior modification, comparative ethics, conservative philosophy, economic rent, hysteron proteron, intellectual discipline, objective identity and empirical value, ontologics, phenomenology of risk, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, probable value, relative value, risk dimension, risk psychology, supply siders, wall street executives
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Identity Theory and Positive Value
Identity is critical for exculpating the probable value of the risk. If risk has an ontological identity, attributable to the Iron Law, for example, how is it “positive” to prosecute people who are merely behaving according to nature’s invisible hand, … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged attributive and retributive value, current value and probability, economic desperation, economic rent, empirical legitimacy and ethical value, exculpation of risk, free markets, functional identity, identity yield, invisible hand, iron law, objective identity, objective reality, Objectivism v. Positivism, optimality, philosophical investigation, philosophy, philosophy of risk, political-economy, rate of interest, risk dimension, valuation of risk
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The Refresh Switch
(Nulling the Hypothesis) In America, aristocracy got a fresh start. Aristocracy has been extended in historical perspective and existentialists, like Ayn Rand, emerged to question the absolute value of moral conventions. The concept of equality, for example, has universal value … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged absolute value, attributive and retributive value, ayn rand, categorical imperative, existentialists, free-market consolidation of capital, fundamental-attribution error, historical perspective, iron law of oligarchy, natural philosophy, negative ontologics, null hypothesis, objective identity, objective value and ethical standards, philosophy of risk, political scientists, political-economy, risk ontology
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The number you have reached is not in service….
The Dow at <15k? No, you have not been "disconnected" from the "real economy." The number you have reached is no longer in service at this time. Like Ayn Rand said, the capital will enclave to protect its ["rightful"] ownership–its … Continue reading
Absolute Value
Creating algorithms that shift the risk and retain reward conserves the aristocratic dimension of wealth and power despite the emergence of middle-class values. It is important to understand, when equities trade at high frequency, risk is not created. The “opportunity” … Continue reading
Posted in Political-Economy and Philosophy
Tagged absolutism, algorithmic design, capitalism, co-optation by fractal design, comparative dialectic, counter-culturalism, creative impulse, economics, flash trading, fractal geometric yield, hermeneutics, inexistentialism, life liberty and happiness, market making, middle-class values, Objectivist philosophy, ontologics, philosophy, philosophy of risk, poesy, politics, risk analysis, risk indicators, risk modeling and management, social contract
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