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  1. Awarded the Gunzo Literary Prize for an essay on Natsume Soseki in 1969, he began working actively as a literary critic, while teaching at Hosei University in Tokyo. In 1975 he was invited to Yale University to teach Japanese literature as a visiting professor, where he became acquainted with Yale critics such as Paul de Man and Fredric Jameson.

  2. Capitalism, he says, is a system in which “economic units—unlike those in previous historical epochs—must depend on the market for everything they need.”3 His argument then proceeds on that basis, building on the premise that what distinguishes capitalism from all other social forms is the market-dependence of all economic actors, and hence thei...

  3. 2022年11月19日 · "Mastodon is a microblogging & social network based on open protocols and free, open-source software. As a decentralized (like e-mail) alternative to commercial platforms, it combats the risks of a company monopolizing your communication.

  4. Maitland introduced what became known as the “Lauderdale Paradox”. He pointed out that there is an inverse correlation between “private riches” and “public wealth”, such that an increase in the former can only come at the expense of the latter (see Foster and Clark, 2009). “Public wealth,” Maitland wrote, “may be accurately ...

  5. Title of an editorial by John Tierney in the New York Times, which criticizes mistakes in Hardin's thesis on the Tragedy of the Commons, on the occasion of Elinor ...

  6. “Stephanie Kelton is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, Research Scholar at the Levy Economics Institute, and Director of Graduate Student Research at the Center for Full Employment and Price Stability. She is Creator and Editor of New Economic Perspectives.

  7. Description. "In How to Make a “Hackintosh”: A Journey into the Consumerization of Hacking Practices and Culture, Paulo Maggauda stresses the connection between lay expertise and mass consumption.

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