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Conclusions Peter Brown and Peter Timmerman argue that mainstream economics is an ‘orphaned discipline’. It is founded, they claim, on a “dated and unrevised metaphysical and prescientific vision that is “incompatible with what we know about the universe and our place in it (Brown and Timmerman, 2015). Looking at free-market theory in the context of the modern understanding of evolution, this assessment rings true. Please share this article - Go to very top of page, right hand side, for social media buttons. Adam Smith’s concept of the invisible hand was a plausible hypothesis when it was proposed more than two centuries ago (Smith, 1776). Given the state of knowledge at the time, it seemed possible that self-interest, if properly channeled, could benefit groups. But as our knowledge of evolution has progressed, this hypothesis has grown steadily less plausible. The problem is that the major transitions in evolution show a pattern that is the opposite of th ....
KLKN-TV History Nebraska held a Walking Malone History: The Visible and the Invisible event on Sunday. April 18, 2021 10:39 pm LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) – Community members took a stroll through one of Lincoln’s most historic neighborhoods on Sunday. History Nebraska partnered with NeighborWorks Lincoln, Hawley Hamlet and the Preservation Association of Lincoln (PAL). People got the chance to discover old and new homes, churches, gardens and parks that make up the historically African-American neighborhood. They also heard perspectives from local and former Malone residents. Former Husker men’s basketball player and longtime Lincoln Police officer Albert Maxey was a speaker, along with former University of Nebraska-Lincoln professor Ed Wimes and former Lincoln Public Schools teacher Karen McWilliams. Lincoln Planning Department historic preservation planner Ed Zimmer led the tour. ....
Residents of Courthouse Road in Palmyra raised concerns about the impact of a proposed development during a public hearing at the Planning Commission meeting on Tuesday night (Jan 12). Developer Tim Miller of Meridian Planning Group submitted an application to build a housing development on a 124.5-acre tract on Courthouse Road last fall. If developed, Ballinger Bluff would contain 48 single-family homes. Miller was seeking the commission’s approval for both the subdivision plan and a Special Use Permit for a central sewer system for the development. Rather than each home having its own septic system and drain field, he proposed a system where clusters of four homes share a single drain field. ....