Rogue Scholar Beiträge

language
Veröffentlicht in Risk Taker!

In today’s post, I want to start a discussion about the use of mathematics and statistics in economics, and with this shocking sentence: When a person studies economics for the first time, it is likely that they will not encounter “crazy” equations that go beyond basic mathematics.

Veröffentlicht in Jabberwocky Ecology

We’re looking for a new student to join our interdisciplinary research group. The opening is in Ethan’s lab, but the faculty, students, and postdocs in Weecology interact seamlessly among groups. If you’re interested in macroecology, community ecology, or just about anything with a computational/quantitative component to it, we’d love to hear from you.

Veröffentlicht in Politics, Science, Political Science
Autor Ingo Rohlfing

The current APSA Comparative Politics Newsletter is dedicated to “Doing Comparative Politics Elsewhere” (i.e. , outside of the US). Thomas Plümper contributes a discussion on Comparative Politics in Europe. In brief, Plümper argues that, until recently, the field of Comparative Politics (CP) has been dominated by qualitative methods.

Veröffentlicht in Jabberwocky Ecology

…in the last 10 years ecology, specifically macroecology, has produced not one, but at least half a dozen different unified theories of biodiversity. These theories broadly unify ideas of area, abundance and richness to produce from a few underlying principles such seemingly distinct patterns as the species–area curve and the species abundance distribution.