Nassim Taleb Discussing/Signing His New Title: Antifragile Things That Gain From Disorder at Barnes & Noble – Fifth Ave, New York NY

Nassim Taleb Discussing/Signing His New Title: Antifragile Things That Gain From Disorder

Business Author Breakfast: Nassim Taleb is a former derivatives trader who became a scholar and philosophical essayist. Bestselling titles include Fooled by Randomness and The Black Swan. His works focus on what to do in a world we don’t understand.

Friday February 08, 2013 8:00 AM

555 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10017, 212-697-3048

Special Instructions

Attendees must purchase Antifragile at the Fifth Avenue event host store. Please maintain your book purchase receipt. Store/event access 7:30 am, Cafe service available. Format: introduction, author discussion, Q& A, meet/greet Mr. Taleb and book signing. RSVP/information: e-mail crm2234A@bn.com

via Nassim Taleb Discussing/Signing His New Title: Antifragile Things That Gain From Disorder at Barnes & Noble – Fifth Ave, New York NY.

Business lessons from Anti-Fragile | Marketing Donut

Non-predictability

Taleb says that anything that is non-measurable and non-predictable will remain non-measurable and non-predictable, no matter how many PhDs you put on the job. There is a limit to knowledge that can be reached, no matter how much you rely on sophisticated statistical and risk management science.

Living life

Provided we have the right type of rigor, we need randomness, mess, adventures, uncertainty, self-discovery, near-traumatic episodes, all these things that make life worth living, compared to the structured, fake, and ineffective life of an empty-suit CEO with a preset schedule and an alarm clock.

via Business lessons from Anti-Fragile | Marketing Donut.

Start-Up: the book » Blog Archive » After the Black Swan, Taleb strikes again with Antifragile

Book review in the form of Taleb quotes organized under topics.

Taleb sometimes gives the feeling of contradictions: marketing is bad, but Steve Jobs is great; barbell strategy and optionality is great, but isn’t it about risks and downsides transferred to others [Isn’t Thales a pure speculator?], cigarettes are bad but traditions are good.

Also this love of tradition makes people with more background at ease to take risks with barbell strategy; but what about the poor with nothing to lose? Benefits might statistically go to those who already have… [It reminds the story told by J.-B. Doumeng: It is a millionaire who recounts his difficult beginnings: “I bought an apple 50 cents, I polished it to shine and I sold it for one franc. With this, I bought two apples 50cts, I carefully polished and I sold them 2 Fr after a moment, I could buy a cart to sell my apples and then I made a big inheritance … “]

You now know why it has been a challenge. A very strange, dense, fascinating book, but if you like these concepts, you must read Antifragile. In fact you must read the Black Swan first, if you have not and if you like it, I am sure you will read Antifragile.

via Start-Up: the book » Blog Archive » After the Black Swan, Taleb strikes again with Antifragile.