Do you teach or study intermediate Microeconomics, or, Advanced Micro course for undergraduates? Osborne and Rubinstein revised "Models in Microeconomic Theory" is free downloadable for you and your students from my homepage (see first comment).
The 2023 revision of my book "Lectures Notes in Microeconomic Theory" is now available for FREE downloading at my homepage (see the first comment). Instructors (only) can ask for a manual solution. The highlight: new review problems (overall 66).
Do you teach or study a Phd or Master course in Microeconomics ? The 2023 edition of my "Lecture Notes in Microeconomic Theory" is free downloadable from my homepage (see first comment). Instructors (ONLY) can also ask for an updated solution manual.
My book with Martin Osborne "A course in Game Theory" (1994) celebrates today the 9999 google scholar citations....:):)
After 27 years I would write it very differently.... but you can still download it freely from:
A few years ago I recorded my "Lecture Notes in Microeconomics (The economic agent) for the free Use of Visually Impaired Students. In case you have such students:
Teachers of courses in Microeconomics: My book with Martin Osborne "Models of Microeconomics" (for undergraduates or master students) is available for free downloading from my homepage
A second – expanded- version of Osborne-Rubinstein MODELS IN MICROECONOMIC THEORY, is now available in "He" + "She" versions. The book fits undergraduate intermediate-micro or topics in microeconomics courses. Buy it or download freely from the publisher’s website (see comment).
An econ student wrote me today: "....a couple of years ago I read your advice for lost graduate students - and oddly it inspired me to try applying to graduate schools. Reread it again today (with my mom, who also enjoyed it a lot!)." So here it is again:
40 years ago I published this paper. Although it is my most cited paper, I think I did better in many of my other papers (some of them hardly cited).
In any case I am proud about the "clarification" which starts the paper (making clear it is not a prediction).
Exactly 50 years ago I walked down these stairs to start my Math studies at the Heb u. This weak I walked up for a guest lecture in Ori Heffetz’ class.
Teachers of Game Theory or Intermediate Micro: You are encouraged to use my 20 years old Didactic Web-Based Experiments in GAME THEORY and Choice Theory which provides the teacher with didactic tools for conducting web-based thought experiments.
What is more satisfying? (i) Getting a paper accepted to a journal (nobody reads). (ii) Having an economist posting my Cafe poster on the wall (all watch)?
(Here is one example I got this week from - Viplav Saini )
A CELEBRATION: My Atlas of Cafes where one can think has now 700 cafes world wide (356 of them I visited and photographed). See the first comment for the URL.
Brno (Czechia) is an amazing city (also) in terms of "Cafes where one can think". I added 10 such cafe to my atlas (see teh URL) I find Cafe Podnebi the best. Here are two pictures from the outside.
We cannot offer you music like Sviatoslav Richter and Arthur Rubinstein.
We can just offer you a free copy of our new book "No Prices, No Games". Download it freely from
Michael Richter and Ariel Rubinstein
I have just finished updating my atlas of cafes (where one can think) I removed cafes which were permanently closed during the last 2 years and cafes which are a part of a chain (of >2 cafes).
My article with Michael Richter "Unilateral stability in matching problems" is now published in Journal of Economic Theory. We are proud about the inclusion of the picture of Michael in the birthplace of the paper: the Orchard Tea Garden in Cambridge UK. The URL in the comment.
My article with Jacob Glazer
"Making Predictions Based on Data: Holistic and Atomistic Procedures" is now publsihed in Journl of Economic Theory. You can access it freely.
Michele Piccione and me rewrote our paper on aggregation signals. Here is the new version called: "Failing to correctly aggregate signals". You can download it at: