Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Cover  Title Page Copyright Dedication Contents  List of Tables List of Figures Preface 1. Extreme Inequality in Income and Wealth
1.1 Rise of the Top 1% and Fall of the Bottom 90% 1.2 Executive Pay and High CEO Pay Ratios 1.3 Economic Inequality: What Do People Consider Fair? 1.4 Why Is Extreme Inequality Worrisome? 1.5 A New Mathematical Theory of Fairness in a Capitalist Society
2. Foundational Principles of a Fair Capitalist Society
2.1 Philosophical Perspectives: Mill, Rawls, Nozick, and Dworkin 2.2 A System-Theoretic Perspective 2.3 What Is the Purpose of a Society? 2.4 BhuVai: A Hybrid Utopian Society of Universal Happiness
3. Distributive Justice in a Hybrid Utopia
3.1 Income Distribution in BhuVai: Formulating the Problem 3.2 A Microeconomic Game-Theoretic Framework: “Restless” Agents Model 3.3 Potential Game Formulation of Free-Market Dynamics 3.4 Is There an Equilibrium Income Distribution? 3.5 Connection with Statistical Thermodynamics
4. Statistical Thermodynamics and Equilibrium Distribution
4.1 Brief History 4.2 “Molecular Society”: Microstates, Macrostates, and Multiplicity 4.3 Phase Space, Entropy, and Statistical Equilibrium
5. Fairness in Income Distribution
5.1 Complex Teleological Systems 5.2 Statistical Teleodynamics: Intrinsic and Extrinsic Properties 5.3 Phase Space in Statistical Teleodynamics 5.4 What Is the Equilibrium Income Distribution in BhuVai? 5.5 Is the Equilibrium Distribution Fair? 5.6 Entropy: Correcting the Misinterpretations 5.7 Replicator Dynamics 5.8 Is the Ideal Free Market Morally Justified? 5.9 Is the Equilibrium Income Distribution Stable? 5.10 Fairness, Stability, and Robustness of a Free-Market Society 5.11 Comparison with Walrasian General Equilibrium 5.12 Bipopulation Game 5.13 Midpoint Summary
6. Global Trends in Income Inequality: Theory Versus Reality
6.1 Comparing Theory with Reality 6.2 A New Measure of Fairness in Income Inequality: ψ 6.3 Scandinavia: Almost Utopian 6.4 Potential Loss of Growth due to Extreme Inequality 6.5 Are the Rich Different from You and Me? 6.6 Gini Coefficient versus ψ 6.7 One-Class and Two-Class Societies: Simulation Results 6.8 Summary
7. What Is Fair Pay for Executives?
7.1 Theory’s Predictions for Large Corporations 7.2 How Much of a Company’s Success Is due to the Executives?
8. Final Synthesis and Future Directions
8.1 Mathematical Foundations of a Utopian Capitalist Society: Maximum Fairness as the Design Principle 8.2 Statistical Teleodynamics: Macroview 8.3 Statistical Teleodynamics: Microview 8.4 Significance of the Utility Function and Its Parameters 8.5 Can a Simple Model Handle Free-Market’s Complexity? 8.6 What About Economic Growth? 8.7 Comparison with Econophysics 8.8 Future Directions: Theoretical and Empirical Studies 8.9 Summary and Final Thoughts
Notes Bibliography Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion