3.72 AVERAGE


Another that I'll revisit in the next year or so. I think I visited this slightly too early on my economics journey, but I think I understood the base of it. I think the text MAY be difficult to parse in the same vein as Nietzche. A genius stream of conciousness that doesn't make for light reading.

That being said, this is one of those books that is WIDELY referenced. (No fewer than six other books in my recent reading have mentioned it, and it's less than twenty years old). So it's one of those significant non-fiction titles that all non-fiction readers have read. I just can't help but feel that so much of the book's strength is in teaching you the difference between Platonic ideals and reality, and yet fails to do so because of the way the author writes. Which is odd, because it's metaphor, that of the Black Swan, has become the DE FACTO explanation for ruinous circumstances since its publication.

I need to read it again. Honestly. Sort of really snarky and intolerable in a way that made me want to rate it lower.

DENSE. Extremely relevant in 2020

Astounded by the depth of work done by NNT to write about the philosophy and this can be understood just by looking at the bibliography section. I took my own time to process what I have just read. Repititive, Sort of confusing, Serious, Mind-bending book.

While the book covers some important topics and provides some solid insight, it takes far too long to make its points. Plus, the author is an arrogant blowhard who goes out of his way to disparage and insult broad classes of people. The book covers these points (among others):

* Some risk domains are hugely affected by outlier events
* Many self-proclaimed experts use models that diminish the importance of these events.
* These outliers cannot be predicted; the only reasonable approaches are to avoid them or to protect against them (insurance, options, etc.).

That's about all you need to know.

As I began reading The Black Swan, my wife wondered if the black swan was a dancer in swan lake. I’ll assure you, my reading hasn’t taken a turn into classical dancing. Instead, I’ve become intrigued by interesting events. Most of the time black swans are what the subtitle says: highly improbable. So The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable is about the random events that aren’t probable, but have a major impact on the world – or your world. Those impacts can be positive or negative.

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fascinating and entertaining book, despite Taleb's unbridled arrogance

The point he is making is a good one, yet the book feels bloated and repetitive, and I had a hard time not putting it down before reaching the conclusion...also, for somebody who is putting down a lot of people for being arrogant with regard to their self-perceived intellect, wisdom, or insights, he comes across as very, very pompous, I found it hard to bear at times...

Repeats thoughts from prior book. Did you wish for more anecdotes about how impressive Taleb is, then here is the book for you. For somebody so concerned about the limits of our knowledge, he proclaims “facts” about life without any proof or analysis. He will criticize a Nobel prize winning who conducted research in economics by analogy to someone thinking the Atkins diet is successful when Taleb knows the healthiest diet is Mediterranean. His ideas against bell curve and the probability of improbable events is useful and fascinating if only a humbler and self aware writer was discussing it.

1000 days of good food, can't wait for day 1001!

like his last book, this is thought-provoking, at times deeply humorous, insightful, a little over my head, but ultimately revealing of my own previously "unknown unknowns" and i think that nassim would be pleased that that is the result of my reading this book. i'm going to have to chew on a lot of these ideas for awhile, and i'm looking forward to reading the bed of procrustes in a month or so