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   » » Wiki: Steven Landsburg
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Steven E. Landsburg (born February 24, 1954) is an American professor of at the University of Rochester in Rochester, New York. From 1989 to 1995, he taught at Colorado State University. Landsburg is also an outspoken commentator on economic, legal, and political issues whose comments have sometimes been regarded as controversial.


Education
Landsburg was an undergraduate at the University of Rochester. He received a PhD in mathematics from the University of Chicago in 1979.


Writings and work

Commentary and opinions
Landsburg wrote a column on "everyday economics" for Slate magazine from 1996 to 2008. The subjects of the columns were diverse and often drew on current affairs. In them, Landsburg discussed the national debt, the , payments to Hurricane Katrina evacuees in New Orleans and in the NFL. Landsburg also discussed recent research in micro-economics and its implications, as in an article on the value of mobile phones and driving, the (career) cost of , and whether or not daughters (as opposed to sons) cause .

Landsburg also addressed legal issues: in a Slate column from 2003, he proposed punishing jurors when a jury's decision is later "proven" to be wrong, such as when an acquitted defendant later admits to committing the crime. If a jury's judgment is later "proven" to be right, Landsburg suggested the jurors should be financially rewarded.

Landsburg has been particularly critical of mainstream , having devoted both Slate columns and book chapters (in The Armchair Economist) to criticize environmentalist principles. As a self-described "hardcore ", Landsburg emphasizes the importance of individual choice. This position extends to and his view that those who choose no insurance should not receive potentially life-saving treatment. This position was asserted partly as a response to an article published by .

Landsburg supports and opposes , and his writings in the topic have appeared in various newspapers and magazines, including The New York Times and The Washington Post. Landsburg's comparison of to in magazine prompted a response from . On April 8, 2005, Landsburg debated and with John Gibson on the Fox News Channel's The Big Story. Before the 2004 presidential election Landsburg stated that he planned to vote against because of his belief that , Kerry's , was a "" due to his opposition to free trade. He compared Edwards' views to 's .

He has also reviewed popular economics books and The Undercover Economist for the Wall Street Journal.

Landsburg has spoken at many distinguished events and in February 2012 he spoke at Warwick Economics Summit and the Adam Smith Institute in the United Kingdom.

In March 2012, Landsburg supported some of pop radio personality 's attacks against a Georgetown University student . Fluke spoke before Congress advocating mandating birth control coverage in some insurance programs, citing their use in preventing ovarian cysts. "There are really good arguments for subsidizing and bad arguments for subsidizing birth," Landsburg said during an interview with . "However, Fluke didn't bother to make any. She made no argument. She simply said she wanted it subsidized." On his blog, Landsburg discussed Limbaugh's calling Fluke a "", and said "A far better word might have been 'prostitute' (or a five-letter synonym therefor), but that's still wrong because Ms. Fluke is not in fact demanding to be paid for sex...The right word for that is something much closer to 'extortionist'." Landsburg's comments drew a rebuke from University of Rochester President , who said he was "outraged that any professor would demean a student in this fashion", and a silent protest from thirty UR students who formed a line between him and his students during one of his classes. University of Rochester democratandchronicle.com March 7, 2012

In a blog post from March 20, 2013, titled "Censorship, Environmentalism and Steubenville," Landsburg spawned controversy when discussing principles on which to justify what is legal. He proposed as a second attempt that "You can do anything you want as long as you're not causing anybody direct physical harm"; he proceeds to conduct an argument by demonstrating that "it would also allow you to rape an unconscious victim if there were no physical consequences". This outcome, in obvious violation of common sense, is then evidence against the second principle.

A petition calling on the university to censure Landsburg received several hundred signatures; this petition, along with a student-led protest outside Landsburg's classroom, attracted national media attention. In response, Landsburg issued an apology in which he said that he had assumed all of his regular blog readers would know that he found rape repugnant, and that the point of the post was to illustrate the paradoxes that arise when trying to prove such obvious conclusions from first principles.


Academic writings
Landsburg's articles in have dealt with many fields, including algebraic K-theory, module patching, philosophy of science and, .


Teaching
Landsburg teaches intermediate and advanced at the University of Rochester. Class Description Lookup He was promoted from adjunct associate professor to professor during the 2005–2006 academic year and in 2007 he received the university's Professor of the Year in Social Sciences award.


Personal
For several years, Landsburg served on the board of directors of Hutchinson Technology, a manufacturer of suspension assemblies for .

Landsburg lives in Rochester, NY. He has one daughter, named Cayley, who was featured in his book Fair Play.

He has eastern heritage. Landsburg is an atheist.George F. Gilder (2012). The Israel Test: Why the World's Most Besieged State Is a Beacon of Freedom and Hope for the World Economy (2 ed.). Encounter Books. . As atheist economist Steven Landsburg puts it: "Mathematics is the only religion that can prove it's a religion."


Books
  • Price Theory and Applications (1989)
  • The Armchair Economist (1993)
  • Macroeconomics (1996)
  • Fair Play (1997)
  • More Sex is Safer Sex, The Unconventional Wisdom of Economics (2007)
  • The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics and Physics (2009)
  • Can You Outsmart an Economist? (2018)


External links

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