As promised earlier this week, I made arrangements to add a few new research articles for the “Digital Library IV” webpage. Some Hamiltonian contributions to Technology and the Manufacturing Sector were added there in keeping with the technological themes of… Read More ›
Hamiltonianism
Update (27 March 2023)
Apart from writing the following up comment to the one I wrote for the ARPLAN Blog, I am also planning to upload some new research articles to the Digital Library. I have acquired a number of interesting ones that lend… Read More ›
Revision (25 March 2023)
My latest comment to the ARPLAN Blog is going to be a two-part post. The first part will be to describe my observations about the Whig interpretation of UK history and its significance for Pan-Germanic Socialism. The second part will… Read More ›
Fragments on Judiciaries and Constitutions
We oftentimes tend to think of Judiciaries as apolitical institutions intended to enforce the law and hold the Totality and even the State to account. Constitutions are the supreme law, defining all Intents and Obligations for the State, Totality, and… Read More ›
Post-Graduate Prospects
I cannot believe that my graduate education is coming to an end later this year. Once it ends, the search for real Meaningful Work will commence. I feel confident that, yes, there are plenty of people who find value in… Read More ›
A Reading of “How to Transform US Politics—and How Not To”
In an America where so much of what passes as political-economic discourse is thoroughly Jeffersonianism, what are the most fundamental characteristics of Hamiltonianism? Hamiltonianism stresses that political-economic power belongs to the Union–the American people, whose Sovereignty is enshrined in the… Read More ›
On Rearmaments of Post-1945 Japan and West Germany
The Jeffersonian Empire of Liberty is being confronted by its own temporality. The “Unipolar Moment” which the Jeffersonians have been trying to build throughout the early 20th century has come to an end. America’s fiscal health is hardly suitable for… Read More ›
Update (27 February 2023)
After having spent yesterday writing a comment for the ARPLAN Blog, I am planning to write a follow up comment, which is meant to coincide with my own research into Intersectionality Theory. The more I think about Intersectionality Theory, the… Read More ›
New Milestone for “The Fourth Estate”
Today, I am proud to announce that this marks my 1,000th Post on The Fourth Estate. After spending three years on the Blog, I cannot believe that an important milestone has been achieved. I may have maintained a number of… Read More ›
Postmodernity and Rise of Social Communions
Yesterday’s latest Entry of Work-Standard Accounting Practices, “Managerial Cost Accounting,” showcased two accounting methods associated with Eugen Schmalenbach. Schmalenbach was a well-known German economist within German academia who is unknown nowadays, even though his contributions to accounting had gone on… Read More ›
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