I wrote:

> If people are going to act like people (mindful of the consequences),
> then -- one way or another, by choice or default -- people will be
> effectively assigning probabilities.  Subjective probabilities, based
> on hunches or whatever, but probabilities nonetheless.

In looking for an old paper by Edwin Jaynes (the physicist, not to be
confused with Julian Jaynes, the psychologist, also an extremely
interesting guy), in which he argues that specifically human thinking
(he calls it "plausible reasoning") is precisely abut determining
probabilities, that people follow probability theory whether
consciously or not.  A bit like Hegel in the Logic, suggesting (with
his digestion analogy) that people think dialectically whether they
know it or not.  Anyway, during the search I got sidetracked into
reading a few papers by Jaynes on statistical mechanics.  In one paper
titled Foundations of Probability Theory and Statistical Mechanics, he
gets into the history of science and offers his graph of how science
(physics, mostly) fluctuated between dogmatism (the domination by a
"paradigm") and a freer thought climate.  This is his graph (peaks are
bad times for scientific freedom and troughs are good):

http://bit.ly/nWTVJA

I don't have time now to think about the connection with economic
history.  So I thought I could just throw this out there and see if
people had any insight into that connection.
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