Me disculpo de antemano por los errores o si la explicación no es apropiada, traté de sintetizar de la mejor manera posible un fenómeno al cual se le debe de poner cuidado. Milton Friedman tenía una frase que siempre me pareció brillante, la inflación es impuestos sin legislación y qué tan certera es esta expresión.Sigue leyendo «¿Viene una crisis? Inflación – 14/7/2021»
Archivo del autor: mauriciogarita
¿Viene una crisis? – Value Investing(29/6/21)
He estado alejado de la escritura de temas financieros a propósito, pero considero que es momento de romper un silencio debido al impacto que puede tener en la vida de cada uno de nosotros. Trataré de ser lo menos técnico posible y simplificar a manera que este conocimiento pueda ser útil para aquellos que conocenSigue leyendo «¿Viene una crisis? – Value Investing(29/6/21)»
Why philosophy for a better life? – Part IV
Carpe diem
Leadership and growth- Part II
In the last post I discussed the importance of value and leadership based on fixed and growth mindset. Today I will focus on the obstacle, the challenges as part of growth. Therefore, I will start with the question: Why should focus on the obstacle? When I think about challenges, I always turn to the amazingSigue leyendo «Leadership and growth- Part II»
Why philosophy for a better life? – Part III
The mind adapts and converts to its own purposes the obstacle to our acting. The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way.
Leadership and growth- Part I
Leading is a privilege, don’t waste it by being afraid or threatened.
Why philosophy for a better life? – Part II
That one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity
Resilience and Finance, learning from investing
Just HODL
Why philosophy for a better life? – Part I
A reminder of memento mori
The unnecessary things
In life, we must choose what is necessary and what is unnecessary. Stoicism has discussed this issue in the text of Marcus Aurelius, Seneca and Epictetus focusing on asking ourselves what is really important. Seneca explains this in letter to a stoic when he tells Lucilius that «Until we have begun to go without them, we fail to realize how unnecessary many things are. We’ve been using them not because we needed them but because we had them.”