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expiredphoinix | Staff posted Jul 10, 2022 07:10 AM
expiredphoinix | Staff posted Jul 10, 2022 07:10 AM

The Black Swan (2nd Ed.): The Impact of the Highly Improbable (Kindle eBook)

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Various Retailers have The Black Swan: Second Edition: The Impact of the Highly Improbable (Incerto Book 2) eBook by Nassim Nicholas Taleb on sale for $1.99.

Thanks to community member phoinix for finding this deal.

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Written by oceanlake | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $12 lower (86% savings) than the list price.
  • About this product:
    • This book has received an average rating of 4.5 stars out of 5 based on over 3,400 Amazon customer reviews.
    • See the forum thread for additional discussion and reviews of this book by Slickdeals members.
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Written by phoinix | Staff
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Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Various Retailers have The Black Swan: Second Edition: The Impact of the Highly Improbable (Incerto Book 2) eBook by Nassim Nicholas Taleb on sale for $1.99.

Thanks to community member phoinix for finding this deal.

Available from the following stores:

Editor's Notes

Written by oceanlake | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $12 lower (86% savings) than the list price.
  • About this product:
    • This book has received an average rating of 4.5 stars out of 5 based on over 3,400 Amazon customer reviews.
    • See the forum thread for additional discussion and reviews of this book by Slickdeals members.
  • About this store:
No Longer Available:

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff

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Top Comments

DanielD3712
35 Posts
26 Reputation
I think that everyone should read Taleb. I also think they should be very careful not to just do whatever he says, some of his ideas are dangerous and the problems have no easy solutions.

His whole thing seems to be "antifragility", gaining from disorder rather than controlling it. It's more sane and refined than the old "Take the warning labels of and let Darwin do his work" or "We have it too easy, get rid of all this modern tech making us weak", but it still echoes some of the same issues.

While he does point out very real issues in the medical field, and many other things mainstream culture doesn't address, he doesn't really seem to appreciate what the slow, careful, locked down academic method has gotten us. Lone geniuses experimenting got us things like steam engines and light bulbs, truly modern tech is only possible because tens of thousands of people can work on things too big for any one man to understand in a whole lifetime.

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Jul 11, 2022 02:49 AM
35 Posts
Joined Mar 2018
Jul 11, 2022 02:49 AM
DanielD3712Jul 11, 2022 02:49 AM
35 Posts
I think that everyone should read Taleb. I also think they should be very careful not to just do whatever he says, some of his ideas are dangerous and the problems have no easy solutions.

His whole thing seems to be "antifragility", gaining from disorder rather than controlling it. It's more sane and refined than the old "Take the warning labels of and let Darwin do his work" or "We have it too easy, get rid of all this modern tech making us weak", but it still echoes some of the same issues.

While he does point out very real issues in the medical field, and many other things mainstream culture doesn't address, he doesn't really seem to appreciate what the slow, careful, locked down academic method has gotten us. Lone geniuses experimenting got us things like steam engines and light bulbs, truly modern tech is only possible because tens of thousands of people can work on things too big for any one man to understand in a whole lifetime.
Jul 11, 2022 07:45 AM
3,903 Posts
Joined Feb 2013
Jul 11, 2022 07:45 AM
babygdavJul 11, 2022 07:45 AM
3,903 Posts
The sort of book where the broadly read or well educated might get a sense of hilarity as this poor bloke attempts to figure out the world and how it operates and how humans react in it as a light weekend skim. But in reality, he's stuck in his era of outdated Gaussian and Mandelbrot plots, the lack of AI/ML/Quantum concepts, and funny ideas about how cups of coffee won't jump off his desk anytime in his lifetime tie into a digression into statistics and probabilities. (While cups might not be leaping feet into the air here, they sure are in Ukraine as the daily missiles hit apartments.)

For the common bloke, it's like listening to that quirky uncle than blabs on forever about everything random in life - cute for a few minutes until better things in life take over one's attention.

Anyways, I'd just overdrive/libby app it free from a library given how dated it is in parts. (AI/ML has far advanced the ability to model and predict in many fields today vs the old days he grew up in without.)

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