IP Team

Keynes vs. The Minimalists- Why Consumption is a Moral Duty

Keynes vs. The Minimalists: Why Consumption is a Moral Duty

There is something deeply satisfying about owning less. Ask anyone who has cleared out a closet and felt that rush of liberation, that sense of moral superiority over the clutter. The minimalist movement has turned this feeling into a philosophy, a lifestyle brand, and ironically, a very profitable publishing niche. Declutter your home. Simplify your

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The Web of Value- How Changing the Price of Oil Changes the Meaning of Everything Else

The Web of Value: How Changing the Price of Oil Changes the Meaning of Everything Else

There is a philosopher most people have never heard of who might explain the modern economy better than any economist alive. His name is Willard Van Orman Quine, and he never wrote a single word about oil prices, inflation, or supply chains. He wrote about language, logic, and the strange architecture of human belief. Yet

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The Case for Offensive Speech- Why We Need Hate to Find the Truth

The Case for Offensive Speech: Why We Need “Hate” to Find the Truth

There is a particular kind of courage that most people claim to have but almost nobody actually demonstrates. It is the courage to defend speech you find revolting. Not speech you agree with. Not speech that makes you feel warm and enlightened. The other kind. The kind that makes your stomach turn. John Stuart Mill

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Stop Being Good at Everything- The Economic Cost of the Renaissance Man

Stop Being “Good” at Everything: The Economic Cost of the Renaissance Man

You have probably been told, at some point in your life, that you should be well rounded. Read widely. Learn to code and to cook. Pick up a language. Play an instrument. Get comfortable with public speaking. Maybe even start a podcast. The advice sounds reasonable. It even sounds noble. After all, Leonardo da Vinci

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Cicero Trap- Why Intelligent People Often Have Zero Political Instinct

Cicero Trap: Why Intelligent People Often Have Zero Political Instinct

Marcus Tullius Cicero was, by almost every measure that mattered to him, the smartest person in the room. He could dismantle an argument the way a surgeon removes a tumor. He wrote philosophy that people still read two thousand years later. He saved the Roman Republic from a conspiracy and then made sure absolutely everyone

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Why a Country With No Resources Can Still Win at Trade

Why a Country With No Resources Can Still Win at Trade

Let us begin with a thought experiment. Imagine two countries. One is blessed with fertile soil, deep harbors, vast forests, and mineral deposits that glitter under every hillside. The other has rocks. Just rocks and some stubborn grass and a population with strong opinions about cheese. Common sense says the first country dominates trade. It

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The Circulation of Elites- Why Revolutions Never Actually Change Anything

The Circulation of Elites: Why Revolutions Never Actually Change Anything

Every revolution begins with a promise. The old guard will be swept away. The corrupt will be punished. Power will return to the people. And for a brief, intoxicating moment, it looks like it might actually happen. Then something familiar settles in. New faces appear at the top. They wear different clothes, use different slogans,

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