Friends, I need help finding a PDF of AlKindi’s treatise on decoding frequencies في فك رسائل التشفير fi 3ilm rassa2l al tashfir; about probability theory, or I am ready to overpay for a hard copy of the Arabic text.
BACKGROUND: Every book written on the historyt of probability theory is bullsly based on some historian claiming that modern probability was “discovered” by Fermat, Pascal, etc., falling for the mential bias that the first account they could find in a language they could read is the first account that was made. And people cite each others and perpetuate the myth. For instance Bernstein’s against the Gods theorizes that Arabsfigured out algebra but not probability. But in fact it is well known that in the Levant, Omayad era ~800 years before Fermat, there were mathematical methods to decrypt messages based on word frequencies. It turns out that Al Kindi in one of his treatises discusses “3lm al-Musadafat” , “the science of probability” and numerical theories of frequencies. The problem is that modern Arabic translates probability by “i7timaliyat” not “musadafat”, which prevented people from connecting.So we need the book. I would love to translate the right segments of it. The original manuscript is in Istanbul which I assume should be digitalized.
Monthly Archives: November 2012
Nassim Taleb and Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder | Alumni & Friends | University of Chicago
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Join us for a discussion with Nassim Nicholas Taleb, best-selling author of The Black Swan and one of the foremost thinkers of our time, on his new book Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder. In The Black Swan, Taleb outlined a problem; and in Antifragile, he offers a definitive solution: how to gain from disorder and chaos, while being protected from fragilities and adverse events. What Taleb calls the “antifragile” is actually beyond the robust, because it benefits from shocks, uncertainty, and stressors, just as human bones get stronger when subjected to stress and tension. The antifragile needs disorder in order to survive and flourish.
Nassim Taleb on Scientific Discovery. In the Pipeline:
But when you look over the history of science, you see many more examples of fortunate discoveries than you see of planned ones. Here’s Taleb:
The luck versus knowledge story is as follows. Ironically, we have vastly more evidence for results linked to luck than to those coming from the teleological, outside physics —even after discounting for the sensationalism. In some opaque and nonlinear fields, like medicine or engineering, the teleological exceptions are in the minority, such as a small number of designer drugs. This makes us live in the contradiction that we largely got here to where we are thanks to undirected chance, but we build research programs going forward based on direction and narratives. And, what is worse, we are fully conscious of the inconsistency.
“Opaque and nonlinear” just about sums up a lot of drug discovery and development, let me tell you. But Taleb goes on to say that “trial and error” is a misleading phrase, because it tends to make the two sound equivalent. What’s needed is an asymmetry: the errors need to be as painless as possible, compared to the payoffs of the successes. The mathematical equivalent of this property is called convexity; a nonlinear convex function is one with larger gains than losses. If they’re equal, the function is linear. In research, this is what allows us to “harvest randomness”, as the article puts it.
Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder « 800 CEO Read
With Antifragile, Taleb is offering us a 500+ page manual to achieve antifragility. He himself admits that here he has become a “practitioner” of his cumulative theories (“I eat my own cooking.”), and this book is “a main corpus focused on uncertainty, randomness, probability, disorder, and what to do in a world we don’t understand, a world with unseen elements and properties, the random and the complex; that is, decision making under opacity.” And throughout, Antifragile is crammed with Taleb’s unique and aggressive style of mixing the scholarly, the historical, the modern, the profound, and even the minutia, amounting to a mountain of thought that Taleb intends will “revive the not well known philosophical notion of doxastic commitment, a class of beliefs that go beyond talk, and to which we are committed enough to take personal risks.” In other words, Taleb wants us to do, not just think about doing.
via Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder « 800 CEO Read.
HatTip to Dave Lull
EvilReads: Humorous Publishing News and Gossip – Andrew Shaffer’s Blog – Nassim Taleb and the Truthfulness of the Amateur
Definitely not a ‘meltdown’ . Twitter absolutely the perfect place for NNT to call BS.
I received an advance copy of the book (Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder) as part of the Amazon Vine program and, sadly, did not care for it much. I left a review on Amazon and on my blog on Tuesday, October 30 that was, shall we say, less than glowing. While I don’t generally leave negative reviews—as a fellow author, it’s dicey territory for many reasons—Taleb specifically points out in Antifragile that negative reviews help, rather than hurt, sales.
Flashforward to Wednesday morning, when Taleb hurled a host of insults at me over Twitter, calling me “sadistic” for daring to insult his book. “The “PUBLIC shd know ON THE RECORD about your addmitted INCOMPETENCE and MEANNESS as you may hurt other weaker writers,” he wrote. I’m not going to rehash all the names he called me during his tirade (some called it a “meltdown”), but you can read his Twitter feed if you’re in the mood for some schadenfraude. I basically just laughed it all off.