jsem's review

4.0

Made me rethink my business and my personal finances. How to mitigate against black swans, which are unpredictable by definition. Could have been shorter and less mathy for my taste. The arrogance was annoying.
kgmck's profile picture

kgmck's review

3.75
informative slow-paced

damianc's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 50%

Great idea, but the telling is repetitive. The challenge with being a contrarian and putting down other professionals is it comes off arrogant and often overlooks some important caveats to why things do/don't work.

richard_f's review

4.0

The book brought a new perspective on forecasting and the random and infrequent occurrence of life changing events. Provides a new world view.

matthewmiller's review

3.0

very tough going. could have been cut down to half the size if the fluff was left out.

Quite interesting, especially if you are interested in statistics and human behavior, or you're in any profession where you use forecasts regularly. NNT really puts things in perspective. A very good read.

jebrant's review

5.0

I still use concepts introduced in this book and Fooled By Randomness in my life regularly, especially when I think about risk evaluation of uncertain and rare events that have high consequences. Sometimes, however, the author's ego can be hard to swallow.
sharanyasarathy's profile picture

sharanyasarathy's review

4.0

For the first 3/4 of the book I was determined to give this 2-3 stars. Taleb is an asshole. However, the post-script essay was much more personable (or maybe it was Stockholm syndrome?), and the technical aspects made me understand the content of the book much better. In either case, NNT can work on his personality, but I thought this book was interesting and would recommend!
thejdizzler's profile picture

thejdizzler's review

4.0

I wrote a medium article inspired by the ideas of this book. Seems like enough of a review to me. You can check it out here: https://medium.com/@jtd1096/black-swans-and-the-great-man-theory-of-history-e1f14d97333b?source=friends_link&sk=1b35e69142aa22f4287d649115fd67f4

tikitechie's review

4.0

I much preferred this book to Taleb’s other book that I read, “AntiFragile,” but this book still suffers from the same drawbacks. The author has good points and is communicating a well-thought-out system, but is really a terrible writer.

Throughout the book, we hear about how Taleb is from the war-torn city of Amun, Lebanon. And every time, he mentions it like it’s new information to the reader— even in AntiFragile, the follow up to this book.

As I’ve come to expect from Taleb, we hear him continuously rail against intellectuals and current fin tech folks. He’s has good points, but his ad-hominem, name-calling prose comes off very poorly.

We continuously hear about how he knows better, because he was on the front lines of trading as a quant. Maybe, but it makes Taleb sound like a class-A jerk; the kind of guy you wouldn’t want to even spend the duration of an elevator ride with. Maybe he doesn’t care. As he won’t let you forget throughout this book, he is Successful and he has “F you money”.

What he actually does do well in this book is provide solid foundations of his ideas, refutes the reliance on the bell curve assumption that powers our current statistical methods, and go into detail about how to implement his “barbell-shaped” risk exposure curve.

In that sense, AntiFragile is really just a repackaging of all the concepts in this book and adds absolutely no additional information.