Economics


Rome and the Indian Ocean: The Classical World in a Global Context
By Craig Wright | 28 Nov 2021 | Economics

Scholarly Review De Romanis, F. (2015). Comparative Perspectives on the Pepper Trade. F. De Romanis and M. Maiuro (eds.), Across the

Merchants and the Tokugawa Political Order
By Craig Wright | 22 Nov 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation

The Tokugawa political order was maintained by a system that some researchers have referred to as centralized feudalism. The structure

Shares 2.0
By Craig Wright | 05 Oct 2021 | Bitcoin & Blockchain Tech, Economics, Law & Regulation

I want you to imagine for a minute a new form of shares that security companies can issue. The security

The Voyage of Captain John Saris to Japan
By Craig Wright | 30 Sep 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

Throughout the world, the 16th century was a time of change, whether Western or Eastern. The Tokugawa shogunate had taken

The Japanese Processes of Unification and Reunification
By Craig Wright | 05 Aug 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

The opening of trade between Europe and Asia in the 15th century led to the arrival of Europeans in Japan

Collectivism and Protagoras of Abdera
By Craig Wright | 13 Jul 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

Faith Ridler (2021) managed to capture many of the aspects of intellectual dishonesty and bankruptcy in her article in the

The Library Analogy
By Craig Wright | 25 Jun 2021 | Bitcoin & Blockchain Tech, Economics, Law & Regulation

Some people think that storing data on Bitcoin is analogous to a public service. There is an error with this

The Anarchist Fallacy
By Craig Wright | 17 Jun 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

A major fallacy of the anarchist idea that we can create a free society using assassination markets derives from transaction

The Source of Dignity
By Craig Wright | 21 May 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

It is common to see reflections on dignity and many individuals who have never been poor reflect on helping others.

The King’s Wi-Fi
By Craig Wright | 05 May 2021 | Bitcoin & Blockchain Tech, Economics, Law & Regulation

The proof-of-work definition that I used in describing how Bitcoin solved the Byzantine generals problem [1], when questioned by James

Offline Addressing

When I initially launched Bitcoin in 2009, I noted two ways of sending bitcoin [1]: There are two ways to

The Short versus the Long Term?
By Craig Wright | 03 Mar 2021 | Economics, Law & Regulation, Philosophy

All positive social change comes at a cost. Many executives of current organisations attempt to argue that the very reason

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