Commerce Unbound: A Modern Promethean Story
Friday, March 31, 2017 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m., RH 117
Presentation by:
Jan Osborn
Assistant Professor,
Chapman University Department of English
Commerce Unbound: A Modern Promethean Story is an experiment with integrating economics and ethics in a form that could be described as literary-critical economic nonfiction.
By mapping the modern world of commerce into our interpretation of Percy Shelley's “Prometheus Unbound,” we revivify bourgeois life as Shelley revivifies the Promethean story with his own take on the myth. In doing so we make Shelley’s purpose our own, “to familiarize” our audience “with beautiful ideal-isms of moral excellence” in their everyday lives of commerce.
Shelley’s point and ours is that any socioeconomic revolution, whether from the left or the right, will ultimately fail if it is fomented by despair, anger, and hate.
Read: Commerce Unbound: A Modern Promethean Story
College of Business and Public Policy MPA Students Earn Honors at Global Competition
UAA Master of Public Administration students Brandon Nye, Kate Wright, Katie Dougherty and Loreen Davis participated in the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs and Administration (NASPAA) Batten Student Simulation Competition on Feb. 25 at the University of Washington campus in Seattle.
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Summer Scholars Program Is Fantastic Opportunity!
This summer the visiting UAA Rasmuson Chair of Economics, Dr. Bart Wilson from Chapman University, is running his annual summer scholars program at UAA. The deadline is soon, on March 9. It is an absolutely FANTASTIC opportunity for a motivated student.
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Marie Claire Villeval Seminar : Loss Aversion and Lying Behavior
Marie Claire Villeval, University of Lyon, will be hosting a seminar on her paper "Loss Aversion and Lying Behavior: Theory, Estimation, and Empirical Evidence", co-authored with Ellen Gabrino and Robert Slonim.
From the paper's abstract:
We theoretically show that loss averse agents facing a decision to receive a bad financial payoff if they report honestly or a better financial payoff if they report dishonestly are more likely to lie the lower the ex-ante probability of the bad outcome. This occurs due to the ex-ante expected payoff increasing as the bad outcome becomes less likely, and hence the greater the loss that can be avoided by lying. We demonstrate robust support for this role of loss aversion on lying by reanalyzing the results from the extant literature covering 74 studies and 363 treatments, and from two new experiments that vary the outcome probabilities and examine lying for personal gain and for gains to causes one supports or opposes. To measure and compare lying behavior across treatments and studies, we develop an empirical method that estimates the full distribution of dishonesty when agents privately observe the outcome of a random process and can misreport what they observed.
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KTOO Features Visiting Distinguished Professor Willie Hensley
KTOO is celebrating the 40th anniversary of John McPhee’s book “Coming into the Country”. In the book McPhee introduced the rest of the nation to one of the most prominent, young Alaska Native leaders in the state. Willie Hensley was instrumental in forcing the state and the federal government to settle land claims with its 60,000 Alaska Native residents.
The full story is available on KTOO's website.
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