When a Chicken Isn’t Just a Chicken

A man stands at a farmers market stall. His wife is talking to the farmer. He picks up a chicken. Paper-wrapped, no barcode, a handwritten tag on the twine. He holds it close to read the label and sets it back down fast. The price is an insult. What are these people thinking?

A minute later, another man reaches for the same bird, reads the same label, and smiles. What a deal.

Roger E. Bissell is a professional musician and independent scholar living in Dickson, Tennessee.

Inflation, Communication, and Noise

In 1948, Claude Shannon published “A Mathematical Theory of Communication” in the Bell System Technical Journal, a paper that established information theory as a formal discipline. Shannon’s central contribution was to show that information can be measured, that communication channels have finite capacity, and that—when noise is introduced into a channel—the receiver’s ability to reconstruct the original message degrades in precise, calculable ways.