Free Trade in the long run will benefit more people than tariff walls.
Not necessarily. That's the whole point of this debate. And since there's no such thing as free trade we don't actually know anything much about what it will do, only what it might.
Temporal Logic, a branch of Modal Logic, exists to abstract the impossible, the possible, the necessary. Such that:
P{x,y}
where y achieves, gains, or has the P referent through Time via x and P is a quality or a quantity - All XOR Some XOR None. If we get lucky, the quantity maybe first order - 'a' number assigned to 'a' variable, tho' it's much more likely to be a second or greater order quantity, such as a Complex Number, or a series of mathematical statements grouped into inter-related families of mathematical statements.
One result of this, using the Lowenheim-Skolem Theorem, is the (potential and unpredictable) bifurcation of model functions from D -> T to D -> T' where T' is who-the-hell-knows-what. ;-) One known occurance of this is the transformation, in Catastrophe Theory, of control to state or state to control variable(s). Time, then, can become a control variable in certain of these transformations.
Modeling (certain) Feedback Loops, therefore, we have to acknowledge the potential for Time to 'jump' between playing a role as a control or as a state variable leading to qualitative change of of the Fitness Landscape.
Note: I am not saying Time isn't constant. That would be ... weird.
I hate temporal logic. Nasty icky stuff.
It's just another dimension. What are we up to now? 18 +/-?
I know I owe the diary and I plan on finishing it Real Soon Now. Any day.
yup, yup, yup.
Of course if I tell you, you'll tell Migeru, he'll tell Sven, and pretty soon today will be tomorrow and yesterday will have had been next month. 8^p
(laughing)