Category: Uncategorized
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Brooks’ Law
Today’s edition of Eponymy in August is Brooks’ Law. In the eponymous’s original words, “Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later.” Fred Brooks called this statement an outrageous oversimplification in his 1975 book The Mythical Man-Month. This book is sometimes called the bible of software engineering, because everybody quotes it, some people…
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Veblen Goods
Thorstein Veblen was an American economist, who taught at Chicago, Stanford, and Missouri before accepting a position in Woodrow Wilson’s administration as part of a group aiming to peacefully resolve the First World War, and later helped to found The New School. Veblen is notable for being a non-Marxist anti-capitalist, who espoused the idea that…
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The Pareto Principle
Vilfredo Pareto was an Italian economist in the 19th and 20th centuries. Pareto has several contributions to the field of microeconomics, but his most famous one was based on an observation of wealth distribution in 1890s Italy. Specifically, the distribution of wealth followed a power law, where the output of a function follows a trend…
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The Streisand Effect
Barbra Streisand is an actress, entertainer, and the best selling female recording artist in history, having 33 albums make the Billboard top 10 and selling close to 150 million records worldwide. She is a multiple time Oscar, Grammy, Emmy, and Golden Globe recipient. In 2003 Streisand sued photographer Kenneth Adelman to remove a picture of…
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Morton’s Fork
John Morton was the Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord Chancellor of England at the end of the fifteenth century. Part of his role at such a high level was setting tax policy for the kingdom, with the goal of restoring the assets of Henry VII’s royal house after the war-heavy reigns of Edward IV and…
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Hobson’s Choice
There’s [ed note: up until it closed in 2024] a lovely rum & punch bar in Haight-Ashbury with the name Hobson’s Choice, but the slogan on their sign (“Order what you like, as long as it’s what I offer”) doesn’t quite go far enough. Hobson’s Choice is, “Take it or leave it.” Specifically, it is…
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Hanlon’s Razor
Like Occam’s Razor, Hanlon’s Razor is a guiding principle for how to shave away that which is unnecessary or unhelpful. In this case, rather than hypotheses or theories, Hanlon’s Razor’s focus is people’s motives. As commonly stated, “Never attribute to malice what can be attributed to incompetence.” While it’s true that, economically speaking, decision making…
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Occam’s Razor
William of Ockham was a 14th-century philosopher and theologian, educated at Oxford and having completed the requirements for a master’s degree but not granted such a degree. Technically a student but admitted into the ranks of the faculty at Oxford, Ockham’s commentary on Peter Lombard’s Sentences (a standard reference of Christian theology at the time)…
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Dunbar’s Number
Today is August 15th, and so for today’s Eponymy in August, the number 150, the consensus estimated value for Dunbar’s Number, is the star of the show. Robin Dunbar is an anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist, who has taught at Bristol, Cambridge, University College London, Liverpool, and Oxford. His specialty is primate psychology and social behaviors,…
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Markov Chains
Today we end Nerd Week for Eponymy in August with the Markov Chain.Andrey Markov was a professor of mathematics at St Petersburg University from 1880 until 1910, when he was removed from his professorship after he would not comply with an order to monitor his students (stemming from the student riots in 1908). In 1917…
