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S**K
How does he think of these aphorisms?
I had no idea who Nassim Taleb was until I heard some readings from his new book. It is short (111 pages c. A5 size) but packed with pithy aphorisms that make me giggle, reflective or just happy that there is someone else out there who has similar thoughts (but he puts them in a way I never could!). A book to dip into when you feel the need. It is no my desk now.Too many examples to quote but here is one: "The curious mind embraces science; the gifted and sensitive, the arts; the lefotvers become economists"
M**N
Sherbet dip
Wonderful bedside book of what I would call quips. It is like a licorice, sherbet dip. With every dip you get another nice tangy taste.It is a shame it is not in couplets or quatrains as the would be easier to memorise. Great author and great original thinker.
J**S
Condensed Practical Wisdom
I tremendously enjoyed the Bed of Procrustes. I suggest perhaps the Kindle edition isn't particularly my recommendation. I bought it on the Kindle, and I would say that having the book in physical form is better, as it isn't really a book to read and then put away. Better to have it close to hand always and keep reminding oneself of the advice and aphorisms inside.Taleb suggests it is best read in small installments, which is advice I would go along with, but whatever you do, and however you digest the text, it's better to have the book and read its content, than not have it because of how one should digest it.A treat, which can be read over and over.
M**R
Read this last
A unusual read. This is not a naval gazing book. Read the talebs other books first and it will give context to the tone of voice this is written in.
J**N
Am I a sucker too?
This elegant little hardback is Taleb's latest publication (2010). It contains thoughts that carry straight on from his arguments in `Fooled by randomness' and `The Black Swan'. Instead of a narrative and argument in a full book, he presents us with his private almost-poetry. We are given a series of aphorisms, well spaced out, only four or five to a page. This slows us down and persuades us to pause to think about each cluster of words.The aphorisms are generally witty and designed to provoke a fresh perspective. They do not have the frivolity of Oscar Wilde, and do not achieve his level of charming, mischievous humour. They are certainly often wise and counter-intuitive, shaking us out of a conventional, shallow view of our modern world. Some structure is given by clustering them in chapters, revealing the preoccupations with which his readers will already be familiar. For instance, there is a chapter called `Fooled by Randomness', one on `The scandal of prediction' and one on `Robustness and fragility'. However I don't see how some of the aphorisms fit into their categories.Taleb is a wise man, and well worth listening to. His erudition and originality are on full display. Here are samples to give you a flavour:"The calamity of the information age is that the toxicity of data increases much faster than its benefits.""Mental clarity is the child of courage, not the other way round.""You can only convince people who think they can benefit from being convinced.""English does not distinguish between arrogant-up (irreverence towards the temporarily powerful) and arrogant down (directed at the small guy).""To understand the liberating effect of asceticism, consider that losing all your fortune is much less painful than losing only half of it.""Suckers think that you can cure greed with money, addiction with substances, expert problems with experts, banking with bankers, economics with economists and debt crises with debt spending."You may notice that he blends a wide vocabulary with American idioms such as `Guy' and `Sucker', which lends a disconcerting instability to his voice. But he generally achieves the balance of an epigrammatic style, and there is an immediate impact for most of his aphorisms, plus an added sequence of afterthoughts, akin to the sensation of a perfume.I remain a fan of Mr Taleb, and would urge others to read this book too. However I have a complaint that must be articulated. This may sound like an `ad hominem' attack. I agree that the `ad hominem' riposte of questioning a man's motives or qualifications for saying something is inadmissible in civilised argument. His book is not an argued case, but much closer to a literary work, hence I believe this complaint is valid.The author has made a lot of money trading options, and more recently from the sales of his books. Fine, and the best of luck to him. Possibly he is the beneficiary of randomness, as he may admit. Now he sets himself up as a philosopher and part poet. He has valuable things to say, but (and here is my complaint) he adopts a sneering tone against the majority of humanity, believing himself as someone much superior in understanding and heroism. I find it hard to stomach his long stream of aphorisms despising those having to work - which is the majority of us. Hence he shows a lack of respect for the readers."Work destroys your soul by stealthily invading your brain during the hours not officially spent working.""There is no intermediate state between ice and water but there is one between life and death: employment.""Karl Marx, a visionary, figured out that you can control a slave better by convincing him that he is an employee."And so on. Mr Taleb has revealed too much of his nasty side, diminishing himself. While he sits on his millions in Treasury Bills, I can do without the sound of him snickering as I trudge off to earn an honest penny. Where is his heroism in this attitude?I receive the distinct impression he regards me as a 'sucker'. For that reason I mark him down to a 3 in this review, which is an average of the 5 I want to give him at some moments and the 1 I want to throw back at him at other moments.
P**.
Sharp, true, funny, thought provoking
This is Taleb distilled. I've read his other books, so it's not possible to know how they would sound and feel to the uninitiated. Worth a try I'd say.
S**E
Short and Thought Provoking
In few words, Taleb manages to get you thinking deeply about a great many things. This is a light volume compared to Black Swan or Fooled By Randomness - but no less powerful.
M**N
Oddly mixed
As a fan of Taleb since "Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets", I'd been looking forward to this.I knew, before purchase, that it wasn't the same sort of book, but simply a collection of aphorisms, and there are some (very) good ones in there.At its best, the book will the thought-provoking, and make you reconsider your approach to how most people in the West seem to approach their life.At its worst, however, the book degenerates into fairly bland attacks on whichever groups Taleb seems not to like today, and at times drifts away from the aphorism into the sound-bite.There's no doubt that the Author has a tremendous understanding of some of the major problems that the Economy (and wider Western civilisation since Plato) is facing, but I'm left feeling that the book wasn't, in the end, the right format to get his thinking across. I personally find Taleb at his best when writing literate, discursive, prose about the subject.On balance, I have to give it 4 stars. This is a rare instance when I feel that a longer, more detailed, work would have been better.
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