Since our initial coverage, William Ford and Tim Lambert have been following this case so closely that I’ve been focusing on other issues where I have more of a comparative advantage rather than doing posts that would end up being similar to theirs. It’s unlikely that I’m going to have anything new to say about the case that you haven’t seen in earlier posts, so, barring major developments, from hereon out I defer to their coverage; John Lott’s blog also has occasional coverage of the case, as does Levitt’s. One last roundup of links:
- Michael Shermer writes in Scientific American, channeling Ronald Reagan, “Mr. Lott, tear down this legal wall and let us return to doing science without lawyers.”
- Ford has given the case its own category on his blog, and has posts linking to Lott’s reply brief and a Chicago magazine profile of the case. In the latter article, GMU Law dean Daniel Polsby has a very perceptive comment on Lott that corresponds to my personal experience: “[Lott is] a man of almost unparalleled personal intensity… He is one of the most energetic, gifted econometricians of his generation, if not in history. But he seems incapable of distinguishing between large disagreements and small disagreements.”
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