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User:JohnAdams1800

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Disclaimer: This is my user page, not a blog or article. I don't disclose my personal information on Wikipedia, and my real name is not John Adams.

Edward Coles, the man who kept Illinois free of slavery.

My main goal is not to right great wrongs (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tendentious_editing#Righting_great_wrongs), but to document events and information. There are some exceptions, such as genocide denial and slavery, but I don't articles on most edit contentious topics.

I am sometimes busy, and remember WP:VOLUNTEER. I sometimes make mistakes or disagree with the consensus.

I have a Bachelor's of Science in mathematics and statistics, and I can verify the results and proofs for most mathematics and statistics articles that are at the undergraduate college level or below. I don't focus as much on editing mathematics articles on Wikipedia, because I prefer using LaTeX formatting.

Link for graphs: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:RCraig09#Inequality,_social_issues

I am an aficionado of international trade. Random trade link: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/07/29/majority-of-americans-take-a-dim-view-of-increased-trade-with-other-countries/

Wikipedia Articles and Projects

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James C. Scott in 2016

I regularly edit articles, mainly related to world events, both in the United States (my home country) and around the world. I am a regular editor of the pages War in Sudan (2023-present) and Myanmar Civil War (2021-present), because they are important armed conflicts that don't get much media attention but have an effect on the lives of millions of people.

  • In particular, I mainly use Sudan War Monitor as my main website for information on the War in Sudan, and The Irrawaddy as my main source for the Myanmar Civil War.

I do edit other articles, such as articles related to economics, history, and society. I usually don't edit articles related to contentious topics.

Some of my favorite articles to edit have been social class in the United States and Solid South.

I don't usually edit mathematics articles because they are well-sourced and written, and mathematics hasn't change much in recent decades. Of the seven Millennium Prize Problems, only one has been solved. Fermat's Last Theorem took 358 years to prove.

About me

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I'm a graduate university student in the United States, getting a PhD in mathematical statistics. I'm ethnically Asian American.

Side-note: My username is inspired by John Adams and his son John Quincy Adams, who were the only 2 presidents out of the first 12 that never owned any slaves. Note that Martin Van Buren freed the 1 slave he owned, and was founder of the Free Soil Party who stayed loyal to the Union.

Some other relatively unknown anti-slavery leaders I admire are Edward Coles (Illinois), Jonathan Jennings (Indiana), Harriet Robinson Scott (Dred Scott's wife), Daniel Henry Chamberlain (Massachusetts-South Carolina), and Henry Cabot Lodge (Massachusetts).

Spiritual beliefs

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I am agnostic, and have seen too much tragedy to believe in happy endings. I agree with Indeterminism and absurdism, but not nihilism. Nihilism has been used to justify some of the worst atrocities, such as the Holocaust and Khmer Rouge.

Religions can be both good or bad. Some of the worst uses of religion have been to justify slavery, discrimination, and unjustifiable violence. Some of the best uses of religion have been to promote peace, mindfulness, and freedom.

Yet the existence of nearly-miraculous numbers such as pi (3.14), e (2.718), and the 50-50 sex ratio have convinced me that external forces do exist, but are not those prescribed in religions.

I don't believe in the afterlife. As Stephen Hawking said:

There is probably no heaven, and no afterlife either. We have this one life to appreciate the grand design of the universe, and for that, I am extremely grateful.

Favorite quote

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“Out of every one-hundred men, ten shouldn’t even be there, eighty are just targets, nine are the real fighters, and we are lucky to have them, for they make the battle. Ah, but the one, one is a warrior and he will bring the others back.” -- Heraclitus

This is an analogy for the 1% rule in Internet culture over 2,000 years later.

Personal Philosophy

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Do not speak ill of the dead

My political, economic, and religious views don't fit in an ideological box, and are guided by the maxims of truth, introspection, and pragmatism. I am an empiricist, and open to changing my mind on most issues.

The fact I have a Bachelor's degree and am getting a PhD itself likely inclines my relatively politically liberal views, but I'm also Asian American. Most racial minorities in the United States are not ideological (defined as agreeing more than 75% of the time with the left or right), and I count myself as non-ideological.

Personal views

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I'm not listing all of my political views here, both because there are some views I want to keep private, and also because I don't have strong views on some issues (i.e. the death penalty, foreign policy, and immigration). I currently support the Democratic Party in general elections, but I am not a registered Democrat, and have voted in Republican primaries because I live in a red state.

My views could be described as progressive, but not ideological. I am open to changing most of them if presented with adequate evidence.

  • One of my personal values is empiricism, that is what statistics show, not merely what seems to be true.
  • Another personal value is pragmatism, that is to be realistic and be willing to weigh costs and tradeoffs.

One of my favorite shows is Adam Ruins Everything. One of my favorite scientists is Nicolaus Copernicus.

I support the right to keep and bear arms, but it doesn't change my political preferences in elections. An armed populace can protect against tyranny, and most deaths from firearms are suicides, not mass homicide victims.

The main reason I support Democrats is because I have a strong distaste for the propensity for falsehoods in the Republican Party. The Republican Party is also dominated by White men, and while there are plenty of women and racial minorities who vote for the party, it is relatively racist and misogynist.

  • In other countries with different political systems, I might vote for parties of the right--i.e. Germany, Uruguay, South Africa, etc.--if I lived in them.

Economic Views

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You could call my economic views as part of heterodox economics. I reject many of the fundamental tenets of mainstream economics, such as the time value of money.

I am a believer in the political economy. Culture is important to understanding economics, including models of economics.

Some of my favorite economists include Peter Turchin, Bryan Caplan, Ha-Joon Chang, etc.

Ideology

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Ideology should not be a litmus test, but adapted to particular circumstances. Confucius gave different advice to different people, depending on their circumstances.

Some people who have influenced my views include James Wilson (Founding Father), Mellow Melon (https://aops.com), MJ DeMarco (businessman), Adam Khoo (Singaporean businessman), Peter Turchin (historian), Matthew Syed (journalist), and Adam Conover (comedian).

The Pareto distribution and Zipf's law from statistics have influenced my political and economic views.

My economic views can be classified as part of heterodox economics, and I focus on empirical evidence, not merely conjecture. One example includes the anchoring effect, where individual judgement is based on relative comparison, and has been used as part of the decoy effect.

Side-note: I am neither a communist nor a fascist. Both ideologies have usually led to totalitarian regimes that have committed democide and genocide in their wake.

Influential Economists

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Some economists who have influenced my views include Thomas Piketty, Ha-Joon Chang, Bryan Caplan, and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita.

Piketty inspired my views about the political economy, Chang inspired my views about economics, Caplan inspired my views on pragmatism, and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita inspired my vies about political science. In particular, Capital and Ideology by Piketty is one of my favorite economics books.

  • One of the most important points of Piketty's book was that income and wealth inequality increased in France after the French Revolution, particularly in the French Third Republic (1870-1940) in the Belle Epoque (1880-1914). Even though France was no longer an absolute monarchy and had universal male suffrage, it was still extremely plutocratic.

Education

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Bryan Caplan's The Case Against Education was an intriguing book, and while I don't agree with all of it, his coverage of signaling is thorough. I don't agree with him on everything in the book, but I have ironically learned a lot from it.

People mostly forget what they have learned in classes, particularly in arcane subjects (i.e. history, fine arts, literature, etc.). Even as a mathematics major, I often forget some content I learned in prerequisite mathematics classes that aren't used in later classes.

Most people don't use what they have learned. For example, I'm a mathematics & statistics major, and although I do genuinely enjoy some areas of knowledge, I likely will never use them--i.e. most history, literature, fine arts, even some science and English.

  • To expand on this, most people will not get a college degree. Less than 40% of American adults over the age of 25 have a Bachelor's degree, and even including an Associate's degree, less than 50% of American adults over the age of 25 have a college degree. Today's schools prepare students for college, even though most won't graduate from college.

Finally, even what students have learned that is relatively relevant is simply signaling. As someone who has taken advanced graduate courses in mathematics, which are arcane by every standard, there are few jobs available. I became a statistician because I need to have a viable way to make a living, though I generally do enjoy statistics.

Favorite Books

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I am not commercially endorsing these books, and I haven't attached any links to the books.

  • Complex Analysis by Lars Alfors
  • Napkin by Evan Chen