Forum Replies Created
RE: Which programming language is best suited for economic planning? @thardin there's a bunch of stuff on this topic. I'm far from an expert, but there are people in the CS dept where I study that do this kind of stuff |
In forum Cybernetics |
1 year ago |
RE: Which programming language is best suited for economic planning? @thardin Rust has no where near the ecosystem of verification tools that C has, although it can do a lot of the stuff required to verify the correctness of parallel programs using affine types which I... |
In forum Cybernetics |
1 year ago |
RE: Which programming language is best suited for economic planning? @Joe This actually doesn't surprise me at all. Often times there is some work done to take advantage of parallelism safely or do fast numeric computing, and then there is some library that allows you ... |
In forum Cybernetics |
1 year ago |
Socialist Accounting Karl Polanyi's entry into the calculation debate, and his own schema for a socialist economy. If you don't have access to jstor and don't know how to use sci-hub dm me on twitter and I'll send a drive... |
In forum Cybernetics |
1 year ago |
Planning with joint production in mind signsearchlight showed me this a bit ago, and I tweeted a bit about it. Thought I'd share it here. |
In forum Computational Economics |
1 year ago |
RE: Which programming language is best suited for economic planning? There are two separate questions: "what is the best programming language for people trying to do research in this area?" and "what will the planning software of the future be written in?" As for the f... |
In forum Cybernetics |
1 year ago |
RE: On Marxian notation I'm more familiar with the Math than the Econ. @thardin I'm interested in those subscript '-' and '+' you had, and their semantics. I can think of some sensible ones that fit with the foundations I am... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |
RE: On Marxian notation Indirectly related: we now have a much better grasp of what calculus is *saying*. Specifically we can think of calculus as really discussing certain homomorphisms between rings of functions on smooth ... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |
open game software I've been playing around with this lately. It's an interesting tool for doing game theoretic modeling by the same people behind categorical cybernetics. Thought you guys might enjoy. |
In forum Computational Economics |
2 years ago |
RE: What are some books that really transformed your approach to and reinvigorated your interest in economic history? The great transformation by Karl Polanyi slaps |
In forum Economic History |
2 years ago |
RE: Approaches to Cybernetics A lot of the current socialist cybernetic crowd is very heavily indebted to cocckshott, and because of that there is a focus on the calculation of production ratios. I'm skeptical of this focus, for r... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |
RE: Categorical Cybernetics @madredalchemist this is not my work, but I linked what I think is the best introduction to the work (it's the first link), but this talk can also be an introduction: after a convo with Ian wright ... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |
Categorical Cybernetics I wanted to highlight some work using optics from category theory to precisely describe systems where an environment and a controller interact bidirectionally. Particular interest is taken with agents... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |
RE: New Harmony Algo I remember I took a look at this a while ago, but it's been a while so I'll have to re-familiarize myself. One issue that slightly bothers me just glancing over it is it has a problem a lot of plannin... |
In forum Cybernetics |
2 years ago |