*Some timecodes:* 0:45 How I write 2:50 Lindy effect 7:00 Skin In The Game 11:35 Ludic Fallacy 14:15 Expert Problem 25:03 The Golden Rule 29:20 You cannot have political opinion without attaching a scale to it 30:50 Risk as virtue 32:50 The system don't learn because people learn 35:40 Law in Switzerland to limit the income for chief executives (didn't pass) 36:10 Christology 40:30 When people tolerate inequality 45:20 Which surgeon would you choose? Q&A: 47:05 Is mandatory conscription gonna create less wars? 52:25 Peacock's tail is NOT USELESS 53:20 How to decide what to read? 54:18 How long can a group of experts survive if they do not have "skin in the game"? 57:40 When the military intervention is justified?
He talks as if he was high. When you are high you get the most interesting and genuine ideas, it's like a firework - but you forget each within 5 seconds. You start a sentence and by the time you get to the end of the sentence you don't know what the heck you were trying o say. At least that's what I was told by people who smoke weed.
it's unbelievable how he gives the talk in this kind of a fractal manner where it's sometimes difficult to make sense of certain elements but as it starts approaching the end, everything becomes clearer and clearer and at the end it all makes sense - really good talk and interesting ideas!
@@AltumNovo Yea....his books were REALLY hard to read for me. As someone who enjoys books. Its like all over the fking place I can't even tell what he is trying to say.
I'm not sure what you got out of it please I didn't think any of it made sense. There was some very good points in the wild wait. Some good rules. But I found them hidden like a needle in the hay.
He knows he speaks to the generations with divided attention. Their little device they nurse-maid, and the globules of competing beliefs in their spongy neural structures.
+ Talks at Google Hey, Around 34:37 Nassim speaks about a peacock. In the subtitles there is a part described as [INAUDIBLE]. The word he is saying there is Zehavian, as in Amos Zehavi, who coined the term "Handicap principle", and used the peacock as an example for it. Please see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handicap_principle So the sentence should be: " And... The peacock, you know, the Zehavian peacock story, the peacock, why does the peacock have a big tail?"
I keep a sign "dont disturb" on my door. That way, the room cleaners keep their jobs, get some time off, I keep my privacy and they keep my 10 USD for their wages.
I like the peacock guy. That's skin in the game. Really putting yourself behind what you believe and that too by confronting Nassim Taleb on video that would be put on RUclips instead of quietly in a paper or in front of a receptive audience setting - ultimate risk taking.
@JimboParadox identity politics is segregation based on race and identity . in India we had Muslim identity politics for a very very long time and now we have Hindu identity politics. The Left is finished in India
@@keyurpatel503 it separates people into those who believe in a monoculture of a fabricated multiculturalism, and those who think multiculturalism is a fair and open interrogation of every claim of each identity group, as was the case in places like Al-Andalus, regardless of the identity group. Of course, I exclude the actual racists, because the latter group of free-minded skeptics often has trouble explaining to the former group they're not among the racists, that all they want are rational explanations. Mind you, the inventor of political correctness is Robin DiAngelo, a white woman with severe insecurities. Every idiot member of every minority (mind you, I'm a minority, and a leftist) drank the Kool-Aid served to them by the physically manifest Get Out character of a white liberal lady out to validate her xenophilia (a kind of racism described by W.E.B. DuBois, though he called it negrophilia).
@@keyurpatel503 what if we still have leftist tendencies in India but under a new name? The leftist operating under the leftist name are all but finished. But their philosophy lives on well under a different more dangerous banner.
My thought exactly. Give him a second chance though? I've been working on a book and who knows how that is going to go if I have to talk in front of some people.
Also because he expects more from his audience, like any good Professor. The modern expectation that an author should be able to communicate complex ideas to a clueless class [what every audience is to an Academic], is irresponsible. You can do that with Harry Potter but not with the books NNT writes.
However, for more complicated and advanced technologies this is not the case. There is no way that "craftsmen" would first invent nuclear reactor and only then develop a physical theory behind it. I would say the same applies to all modern semiconductor industry.
No, dumb*ss. India had and has a caste system which places Brahmins (intellectuals) at the top of the chain and the technicians/workers (Vaishyas) below them which is opposite the point of Taleb. Go read his books, he specifically states this.
@@OttoFazzl Nuclear tech & theory hasn't been around long enough to say whether it is a true counterexample or an exception to the general rule. Also, Fermi created the first working reactor before large parts of the currently accepted theory was known. His tinkering invented a primitive, working reactor in 1942. Meanwhile we're still waiting for the complete, correct theory (formerly called GUT) to arrive. Indeed, the current state of theoretical physics is more unsettled today that it was in his day.
@@emanuele3696 except when you you're one that travels to locations with outbreaks and knows a big one could take your friends and relatives. This man's way of implicitly devaluing certain professions is overly simplistic and outright stupid sometimes. No true Scotsman fallacies abound.
@@Di66en6ion There is no saying that a person who bears risk by putting his/her skin in the game will not make bad decisions. Epidemiologists ought to make masks mandatory by February 2020 but here we are
@@Di66en6ion He is speaking in generalisations - of course there will be exceptions. I disagree that his devaluation of certain careers could be considered implicit. Could you possibly provide an example of a no true Scotsman fallacy in this talk? I think if you read the book you might see that he touches upon many of the qualms you currently have.
@@mo0on487 I had huge personal changes in my life after I reading Antifragile. I'm better for it now, but there was a lot of stuff to go through at the time. If the new book has the same affect, there could be more big changes to be made.
@@josefrancis7126 The man holds an MBA from Wharton, taught (and teaches) at several prestigious universities, has held senior positions at major companies in the financial industry, and has, by all accounts, had a very long & successful trading career. Rather than attempt to diminish him, it might be better to listen.
Funny thing is, if the Peacock's tail were actually useless, there wouldn't be any peacocks with tails. Same point made by Taleb, strange how Taleb misses the application in evolutionary biology (especially after citing evolutionary biology several times).
10:02 - illusion that technology comes from science 13:37 - the more uncertainty there is, the more certainty is in what to do. 28:00 - skin in the game consists of 1) dynamics over time 2 things change in scaling 28:48 - individual is a different animal and a group is a different animal 46:23 - How to hire people? Which people to hire and fund 48:14 - the logic of risk taking
The Market have been suffering over the past month, with all the three indexes recording losses in recent weeks. My $400,000 portfolio is down by approximately 20%, any recommendations to scale up my returns before retirement will be highly appreciated.
Investors should be especially cautious about their exposure and new purchases in the face of inflation. Obtaining such high yields during a recession is only possible with the assistance of a reputable advisor or competent specialist.
A lot of folks downplay the role of advisors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k.
Agreed! this is why I work with one. My $520k portfolio is well-matched for every market season yielding 85% rise from early last year to date. I and my advisor are working on more figures for this year. IMO, financial advisors are the most sought-after professionals after doctors.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances
CELIA KATHLEEN MARTEL. is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
I read ‘Antifragile’ a few years ago and did not like it, less for the actual content but his tone. But listening to this talk absolutely blew my mind. Taleb is spot-on. Controversial, destructive but sincere in his statements.
What Naseem Nicholas Talib labors to illuminate in a highly organized manner is: at least partly understood intuitively by most folks, in some parts. This is why his academic exercise on the chosen concepts resonate so well. E.g. The Yogi Berra quote, which itself resonates so well because it encapsulates the obvious in a comical rememberable way. Where Me Talib excels is he objectively examines and chronicles these ideas, some well known and some not so well known. IOW we all have an institutional understanding developed over centuries of experience that is not formally passed by wrote absolutes repeated and tested on. I love his books because they're like a statistical model. You may uncover unrealized correlations, but if the model is Amy good, it also confirms the obvious. He's a delight to read and I hope he continues to find motivation and reason to continue his exploration and documentation of interesting aspects of our human condition.
Despite his rather harsh ways this is what a genious sounds like: very sophisticated ideas with complex and imense impact; delivered in short, concise, very easy concepts.
I like his writing and some of his observations are in my view, bang on the money. The best bit of this video is the guy who puts him right about the peacock's tail...a lesson in irony; if only Taleb was an expert on animals.
Just read the book ! Nassim is my favourite modern thinker, but listening to him discuss his ideas is like listening to Mozart mangled by an 8 year old.
Seems like he was nervous at first. First few minutes were bad but around minute 10 he became more articulate. I'm glad I didn't skip this talk too soon.
This is a brilliant guy. Love what he has to say on war. My own take on it is this - if you want to go to war in some foreign land, cash out all your assets, grab a gun, and get in the front line. Otherwise shut the hell up.
@@JustinPavoni I year ago I would have disagreed. I am from the "duck and cover" generation. The last year has been a real eye opener for me. More than COVID, the things I have learned about almost every institution I thought I could trust has left me pretty demoralized.
@@joeblow2387 Duck and cover ain't gonna do shit if a bomb hits. Kinda like staying isolated inside with a mask on your face and a bankrupt business is going to make you more likely to get sick from a virus (not less). Everything the media says is a lie. Big business and government are an organized crime partnership. It's much worse than you think and it has always been this way. Best thing to understand is that it's all about the media and the banking system. Listen to a guy named Ryan Dawson - best reporter I have found on the internet. Stay out of debt. Buy gold and silver and keep it at home. And support as many small and independent businesses as possible (ideally use metals to transact). That is how you beat them (starve them by not patronizing their weapon - central banking and fiat money).
Translation of “skin in the game game” into German would be “Die eigene Haut riskieren” “to risk ones own skin”. However most Germans would understand and prefer the English version
I think that you're taking quite a bit of a leap there by going too literal. To have "skin in the game" is vastly different from having "YOUR skin in the game". Damn German articles! :D Had it been up to me I'd have translated it into "Wer nicht wagt...", the beginning of the German phrase "Wer nicht wagt, der nicht gewinnt." which, again loosely, translates to "You can't win, unless you take chances."
While I totally agree that having skin in the game is so important, to say that an action is justifiable if those who advocate for it are willing to pay the price if they are wrong (57:36) is complete nonsense. For any stupid idea, you will find idiots who are willing to put their skin in the game, but does that mean the action is justifiable? By that logic terrorist actions are justifiable because the ones who do them have put skin in the game.
Well, I think it's not about the outcome itself..but the degree of expertise. Wouldn't you trust a terrorist to kill people if he's prepared to kill himself along with those people? That makes him an expert terrorist. Sound weird when I write that😂 Plus, you also need to look at it with Talebs idea of convexity.
@@codenameHara Wait, but the point was if it's justifiable, not about expertise. I think the Q & A at the mentioned timestamp are clear on that. If we deviate to expertise, and I repeat that this is something else, I would say not necessary. I agree "skin in the game" is a necessary condition, but not a sufficient one. He can have "skin in the game", but be the worst terrorist ever. I guess would be hard to find a good one based on previous experience :)
Ok. I am leaving this comment just as I bring up the presentation. I am familiar w/ Mr. Taleb's work and the fact he was one of very few who predicted the market crash in '08. I will definitely be reading this book when I get a chance because if his premise is that people across the socio-economic strata need to feel like they have skin in the game for a free society (or any society really) to work then I agree whole heartedly. "Skin in the game" has been a go to talking point for me for like a year or so now. And I am just super pschyed to hear someone else say it! Plus his audience is way bigger than mine. (God bless all my coworkers for listening politely, they're good people) Changing minds is both the hardest and easiest thing a person can do.
Actual RAGE. Funnily enough, he doesnt get the point of actual use as in: being able to actually fight a predator, or just signaling that you could. Which is exactly the point.
I just adored this,very helpful I have so many questions and nobody but Google to ask. I'm going to read your books asap because I'm super confused and the anxiety about this path is intense.
if you are not a person with tech/math background, i would highly recommend going through Khan Academy's statistics playlist before reading his books :)
The answer about Truth was very deep. truths that are useful and impact individuals in society will eventually survive. And I guess that happens through through mutiny and/or overthrowing of a regime or change in Governing party
Great for a bike ride... No need for him to be interesting. The takeaway is to only read the last chapter of his book, "Skin in the game." He didn't get to this point until almost the end.
"Skin in the Game" in german = "seine Haut aufs Spiel setzen". There is a german bishop, Reinhard Marx, who wrote a book on economics called "The Capital / Das Kapital", drawing a lot from the concept, 2 years before the Black Swan came out.
i must attempt his book(s), especially considering the initial statements. Although many of his examples in this talk were smashers, some did not make sense to me ( I felt the questioners delivered some valid critique). 'i take risks - i make tweets' (?). the unsubtle knife. I guess it depend on ones point of view, ones priestly height "bumfff" as he lands back to earth. scales of risk. 'Soldiers in Normandy' - risk of death was great here but i'm sure the majority of soldiers were 'actually' there under gravity of duty (draft) rather than wonder lust - although it may have been exciting, terrifying, empowering for them,, war and young men etc. He talks about levels of risk but understands this differently to me (cos its complex). But there were some great observation and he did talk of scales of risk. evolutionary edies can burst new banks. rococo - baroque - classasicm - modernism - contemporism. His swing at the world hacks a mark but his nose seems very bloody - the cost of his in-elegance? But still there were some great observations and I will read on! thanks.
Nassim needs to study Algorithmic Probability. Indeed, Google needs to study it relation to "bias" or Google may find itself subject to draconian governmental intervention. My response to the UK government's initiative on "bias" in algorithmic decision-making by its "Center for Data Ethics and Innovation": The missing ingredient in remediating bias is that we use data to recognize bias, including bias in the data itself. Any serious experimentalist understands this: Measurement instruments must be modeled along with the measurements they report. The solution to this apparent conundrum in data analysis has been known since the early 1960s: Algorithmic Information Theory. In short, to discover bias in the data, one must strive to approximate its Kolmogorov Complexity program as model selection criterion: The smallest program that outputs the data embodies the best model, including the best model of bias in the data. Multiple measurement instruments provide the cross-checking data necessary to discover bias. Since entire disciplines can be biased, this means cross-disciplinary measurements must be included in a comprehensive corpus to be compressed. Aside from the fact that this is _the_ right way to discover bias in the data, it has the additional benefit of resolving the political conundrum entailed by vague model selection criteria for adoption in public policy. www.gov.uk/government/publications/interim-reports-from-the-centre-for-data-ethics-and-innovation/interim-report-review-into-bias-in-algorithmic-decision-making
Although, Nassim books are on the top of favorites, but based on his idea they won’t survive because there can be summarized: Skin in the game: if people can transfer risks and not own their risk, the system will fail. The minority can always rule the majority.. Antifragile: the same way a muscle will gain from pressure in the gym , transfer this concept to other domains. Always think micro at the bottom and go macro as you widen/grow. Bingo two books summarized in 1 mns
With all due a respect but you can also simply see Libya and Iraq as Kadafi and Hussein paying their prices for taking crazy sociopathic risks with lives of tens of thousands of others which is well documented. And obviously interventions had some tragic consequences but the outcome was not known for sure beforehand and most of farther damage was done by agents of fallen and other active regims. So and obviously macro bs' rule and other of Taleb's wisdom you can apply even to Taleb. Thank you for it
bad attribution to darwin taleb he never said survival of the fittest, the concept is that their is no genetic makeup that is superior to another but that there is a specific adaptation for each individual environment. kind of like a hummindbird
He talks as if he was high. When you are high you get the most interesting and genuine ideas, it's like a firework - but you forget each within 5 seconds. You start a sentence and by the time you get to the end of the sentence you don't know what the heck you were trying o say. At least that's what I was told by people who smoke weed.
When he said journalists in oppressive regimes I waited for him to mention his middle-eastern brothers but he never did, he only mentioned Latin America 38:20. Another example that shows that however smart people are they always flock to their own kind (race). Although he looks more like Socrates than middle-eastern.
I don't understand the surgeon example of who to pick. You pick the one that looks like the butcher? Because he had to overcome more? Can someone clarify thanks!
What about George Orwell's 1984? Didn't that major book written in 1947 anticipate on the future ? So,by way of consequence some books are also written to perceive and understand the future
Nobody predicted Google but Douglas Adams did create the Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which was a continually revised universally online volume which was electronically accessed. Now, maybe google looks a little tame by comparison.
When he mentions at around 11 minutes “people who come from theory and go into practice blow up” does he mean it in a negative way in that they can’t handle the reality of practice or in a positive way as in they are really successful?
The reason why Google are Genius at the past and future is because they realise that folk are curious and want to communicate to each other. Taleb's genius is that the past is the future which means humans want stability and security. And Googles genius is that the future will be faster than the past, faster communication till it is instantaneous. Google's genius is that in the future they will know what you are going to think before you do which is great because a lot of folk do not know what they want in life. This can solve a lot of wrong decision making if done correctly. What do you think?
@@ahmedreads1794 Thanks for your comment. And if you study history you will know (as I am sure you do) that the speed of communication is everything. Think of the speed of knowing a company reports lower sales or an enemy signals it is going to war. Speed of communication is everything in the 21st century. In 1880 or 1930 the speed of communication was a lot slower but the first people to get that information had an advantage. History has taught that you only need a 5% advantage to clean up. Haha.
I wonder how certain types of philosopher - certain types of metaphysician, say - could have skin in the game? Aren't there kinds or levels of theory that just can't really be approached in this way? But yeah, great lecture.
@@alletklameista But isn't the point that they don't suffer if/when they get things wrong? Their points may be falsifiable, and may be in fact false, and may even have been shown to be false by some critic or other - the philosopher can ignore that criticism, or fail to see its validity, or not even be aware of it; the philosopher can therefore keep making the same points, and not suffer at all as a consequence.
@@alletklameista Yeah, I guess reputation goes some way to fulfilling this role. Maybe a key point is just that it's harder for everyone to know what's right in those very abstract discussions. That's probably a reason to be suspicious of them, or especially cautious with them.
Interesting that comments are turned off for his anti-fragile talk-especially considering his comments on state intervention on medicine! Extreme and temporary. For some reason, I cannot view replies to my comments. I have checked my community settings-grateful for any advice-please post as a separate comment. Thank you.
To be effective, feedback needs to be as quick as possible. At one time in our history, two, four, or six years were a short time, but not now. One science-fiction story posited a leader who could do whatever they wanted, but was subject to immediate feedback via implants, and if enough people gave negative feedback it could be quite painful.
I wonder if Taleb's Darwinian logic can apply to something like, say, affirmative action policies in University and grad school admissions. Here, I'm thinking of those students from marginalized backgrounds who encounter intense adversity in their life, but who manage to perform at high levels nonetheless. It seems like those students should have an advantage in admissions according to Darwinian survival. Because if those students perform well despite the psychological, social, and educational barriers they have faced, then there must be something about them that helped them overcome that. Perhaps they're highly intelligent, hardworking, persistent, creative, or some combination of traits. So this is all to say that students from adverse backgrounds have proven themselves to be especially "fit," in a Darwinian sense; otherwise, they would not have survived, say, getting through an undergrad degree with a high GPA etc. It seems like there is an argument for selecting the "best" through AA policies somewhere in there (but only for those that have struggled profusely but have risen above it).
@@gordongordon98 That's a fair point. And I don't want to claim that luck doesn't exist and isn't a factor. But I'm sure it's not the entire story either. I think Taleb would say the same (although I've only read part of fooled by randomness sadly).
@@manuelcastellanosjr4929 yes, absolutely not the entire story, but a main player in events. I just finished his books, I found them very interesting, and insightful. I hope you are able to read them too. Cheers
@@gordongordon98 Yes, definitely, and I will get around to finishing it asap (even though it's kind of depressing). Cheers and good health to you and your loved ones during Covid!
Kind of off the topic in my mind. He’s focusing on removing “barriers”, as risks were not fall upon the risk takers, it created a barrier between the takers and the consequences. That might sound Darwinian but it’s not exactly that. He clarified his point about “inequality” by pointing out he was concerned with “elevators”, in which the moment you got in, you are done. In which case the conversation should shift toward things like is Ivy League really a good idea for society and so on. In any case, helping disadvantageous groups has never been a problem or in need of justification. This might be a digression about the controversy, but the complain about AA in America was controversial because of its focus on racial elements rather than purely background.
*Some timecodes:*
0:45 How I write
2:50 Lindy effect
7:00 Skin In The Game
11:35 Ludic Fallacy
14:15 Expert Problem
25:03 The Golden Rule
29:20 You cannot have political opinion without attaching a scale to it
30:50 Risk as virtue
32:50 The system don't learn because people learn
35:40 Law in Switzerland to limit the income for chief executives (didn't pass)
36:10 Christology
40:30 When people tolerate inequality
45:20 Which surgeon would you choose?
Q&A:
47:05 Is mandatory conscription gonna create less wars?
52:25 Peacock's tail is NOT USELESS
53:20 How to decide what to read?
54:18 How long can a group of experts survive if they do not have "skin in the game"?
57:40 When the military intervention is justified?
You're the real MVP
Good golly that peacock guy was salty.
He talks as if he was high. When you are high you get the most interesting and genuine ideas, it's like a firework - but you forget each within 5 seconds. You start a sentence and by the time you get to the end of the sentence you don't know what the heck you were trying o say. At least that's what I was told by people who smoke weed.
You sir are the real deal
GOD BLESS YOU
"You should never tell people what they should be doing. You should tell them what you're doing."
Nassim Nicholas
Not an original thought, but still poignant.
@@GR_BackingTracks indeed, thank you
:)
Baldness is an evolutionary mechanism for people to have more skin in the game, all else being equal.
And its not an angency problem too
fair enough
Baldness is just a way to have less hair in the game, fatness on the other hand...
@@commonsense6093 yeah, fairly "platonic" :-)
Also those who haven't hedged tail risks?
it's unbelievable how he gives the talk in this kind of a fractal manner where it's sometimes difficult to make sense of certain elements but as it starts approaching the end, everything becomes clearer and clearer and at the end it all makes sense - really good talk and interesting ideas!
Yes it is amazing. Same for his books.
@@AltumNovo Yea....his books were REALLY hard to read for me. As someone who enjoys books. Its like all over the fking place I can't even tell what he is trying to say.
I'm not sure what you got out of it please I didn't think any of it made sense. There was some very good points in the wild wait. Some good rules. But I found them hidden like a needle in the hay.
He is soo scattered, it's really hard to follow what he is trying to say
He knows he speaks to the generations with divided attention. Their little device they nurse-maid, and the globules of competing beliefs in their spongy neural structures.
+ Talks at Google Hey,
Around 34:37 Nassim speaks about a peacock. In the subtitles there is a part described as [INAUDIBLE].
The word he is saying there is Zehavian, as in Amos Zehavi, who coined the term "Handicap principle", and used the peacock as an example for it. Please see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handicap_principle
So the sentence should be:
" And... The peacock, you know, the Zehavian peacock story, the peacock, why does the peacock have a big tail?"
Noticed it too, must be a captioning algorithm that replaces 'I don't know/understand' with [INAUDIBLE] even if 'Zehavian' can be heard clearly :)
thanks man.
U can't walk away from risks u've created for others. Excellent line
I once visited a hotel where they gave you a $10 daily credit if you chose not to have your room cleaned. I liked that.
I keep a sign "dont disturb" on my door. That way, the room cleaners keep their jobs, get some time off, I keep my privacy and they keep my 10 USD for their wages.
I like the peacock guy. That's skin in the game. Really putting yourself behind what you believe and that too by confronting Nassim Taleb on video that would be put on RUclips instead of quietly in a paper or in front of a receptive audience setting - ultimate risk taking.
Except it was a Q&A and he didn't have a Q.
@@dawgish4834 No, but I had an A.
@@Bjrnstman Ty… even Taleb can comment out of his area of expertise.
"Identity Politics is a form of Racial Segregation". So true, so very true.
@JimboParadox identity politics is segregation based on race and identity . in India we had Muslim identity politics for a very very long time and now we have Hindu identity politics. The Left is finished in India
@@keyurpatel503 it separates people into those who believe in a monoculture of a fabricated multiculturalism, and those who think multiculturalism is a fair and open interrogation of every claim of each identity group, as was the case in places like Al-Andalus, regardless of the identity group. Of course, I exclude the actual racists, because the latter group of free-minded skeptics often has trouble explaining to the former group they're not among the racists, that all they want are rational explanations. Mind you, the inventor of political correctness is Robin DiAngelo, a white woman with severe insecurities. Every idiot member of every minority (mind you, I'm a minority, and a leftist) drank the Kool-Aid served to them by the physically manifest Get Out character of a white liberal lady out to validate her xenophilia (a kind of racism described by W.E.B. DuBois, though he called it negrophilia).
Hello Keyur Patel, how are you
@@keyurpatel503 what if we still have leftist tendencies in India but under a new name?
The leftist operating under the leftist name are all but finished.
But their philosophy lives on well under a different more dangerous banner.
He's got so much he wants to get out that he can't stick on most thoughts for long.. not a great speaker but interesting and genuine
My thought exactly. Give him a second chance though? I've been working on a book and who knows how that is going to go if I have to talk in front of some people.
Also because he expects more from his audience, like any good Professor. The modern expectation that an author should be able to communicate complex ideas to a clueless class [what every audience is to an Academic], is irresponsible. You can do that with Harry Potter but not with the books NNT writes.
I literally can't follow his thought process he jumping around like crazy barely explaining things.
@@natehaber2598 read the book. You will get a longer more coherent narrative.
Definitively interesting, he makes you think even if you are not convinced that he is 100% right about his categorical statements.
10:00 Right! In Ancient India, people became, say, ironsmiths first and then eventually understood metallurgy. Technology preceded science.
However, for more complicated and advanced technologies this is not the case. There is no way that "craftsmen" would first invent nuclear reactor and only then develop a physical theory behind it. I would say the same applies to all modern semiconductor industry.
Yes, Tech gives us Science in most cases. I don't know if your claim about Ancient India is entirely true, so let's keep it real.
No, dumb*ss. India had and has a caste system which places Brahmins (intellectuals) at the top of the chain and the technicians/workers (Vaishyas) below them which is opposite the point of Taleb. Go read his books, he specifically states this.
Pay attention to what the speaker says at the 03:50 mark. ruclips.net/video/_j13xfvMUms/видео.html
@@OttoFazzl Nuclear tech & theory hasn't been around long enough to say whether it is a true counterexample or an exception to the general rule. Also, Fermi created the first working reactor before large parts of the currently accepted theory was known. His tinkering invented a primitive, working reactor in 1942. Meanwhile we're still waiting for the complete, correct theory (formerly called GUT) to arrive. Indeed, the current state of theoretical physics is more unsettled today that it was in his day.
14:40 Taleb: Don't invest in restaurant business
2020: yes
17:46 "an epidemiologist will not be an expert"
2020: yes
@@emanuele3696 except when you you're one that travels to locations with outbreaks and knows a big one could take your friends and relatives.
This man's way of implicitly devaluing certain professions is overly simplistic and outright stupid sometimes. No true Scotsman fallacies abound.
@@Di66en6ion There is no saying that a person who bears risk by putting his/her skin in the game will not make bad decisions. Epidemiologists ought to make masks mandatory by February 2020 but here we are
@@Di66en6ion He is speaking in generalisations - of course there will be exceptions. I disagree that his devaluation of certain careers could be considered implicit. Could you possibly provide an example of a no true Scotsman fallacy in this talk?
I think if you read the book you might see that he touches upon many of the qualms you currently have.
Peter Thiel has same advice
Nassim Taleb's book antifragile changed my life. I am so excited about this book. & also scared.
Sam Joel can you tell me how your life changed as a result of reading that book?
@@galbisabdi5807 Education mate
@@tanjiro9293 explain further
@@mo0on487 I had huge personal changes in my life after I reading Antifragile. I'm better for it now, but there was a lot of stuff to go through at the time. If the new book has the same affect, there could be more big changes to be made.
@@tanjiro9293 i’m in the middle of antifragile and every time i sit down to read it i want to change up my life
We need to keep this guy alive for a few generations. The world needs him.
What is this We? Speak for your own ball bag.
I love how he constantly goes out of his way to insult economists lol
HE FAILED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN LIFE IN ECONOMICS iHIGH SCHOOL)
@@josefrancis7126 The man holds an MBA from Wharton, taught (and teaches) at several prestigious universities, has held senior positions at major companies in the financial industry, and has, by all accounts, had a very long & successful trading career. Rather than attempt to diminish him, it might be better to listen.
That is because economists are crap. I know, I have a degree in the field.
@@Onir500 on lighter note, you have skin in the game
@@Onir500 was d
The segment at 46:27 reminds me of how Russell Peters said he'd never go to a doctor who was an Indian man raised in North America.
The guy got pretty sentimental about the peacock
He married with one of them, the most nihilistic.
I appreciate his intervention, and the fact that he is passionate about peacocks.
Now everyone knows he's an "evolutionary biologist", whatever that means , even though he's been working on ads for that past 10 years in Google.
Taleb ought to find another useless part of Peacocks :D
Funny thing is, if the Peacock's tail were actually useless, there wouldn't be any peacocks with tails. Same point made by Taleb, strange how Taleb misses the application in evolutionary biology (especially after citing evolutionary biology several times).
Great to listen to Taleb always A rare mix of truthfulness and genius
What an idiot.
10:02 - illusion that technology comes from science
13:37 - the more uncertainty there is, the more certainty is in what to do.
28:00 - skin in the game consists of 1) dynamics over time 2 things change in scaling
28:48 - individual is a different animal and a group is a different animal
46:23 - How to hire people? Which people to hire and fund
48:14 - the logic of risk taking
Taleb smacking his 3 appearances per year, lately. Enjoy this gem.
At 56:50 he says ”Vuitton bags” not completely inaudibly.
I completely agree.. so many books, especially the nonfictional ones can be summaries instead of full books!
you should be a blinkist customer then lol
@@nozrep do you like Blinkist?
The Market have been suffering over the past month, with all the three indexes recording losses in recent weeks. My $400,000 portfolio is down by approximately 20%, any recommendations to scale up my returns before retirement will be highly appreciated.
Investors should be especially cautious about their exposure and new purchases in the face of inflation. Obtaining such high yields during a recession is only possible with the assistance of a reputable advisor or competent specialist.
A lot of folks downplay the role of advisors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k.
Agreed! this is why I work with one. My $520k portfolio is well-matched for every market season yielding 85% rise from early last year to date. I and my advisor are working on more figures for this year. IMO, financial advisors are the most sought-after professionals after doctors.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances
CELIA KATHLEEN MARTEL. is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
I read ‘Antifragile’ a few years ago and did not like it, less for the actual content but his tone. But listening to this talk absolutely blew my mind. Taleb is spot-on. Controversial, destructive but sincere in his statements.
Antifragile systems are what HFTs use. Those systems thrive when chaos increases
Christology suddenly made sense to me. Virtue signalling via risk. Christ had to be human in order to suffer. Wow. Thanks, Mr. Taleb.
But Jesus is human and God, that was the struggle around the christology.
7:20 The guy in the bottom left's reaction to no spoiler alert
7:16 Guy on left - "Dude, WTF!? Spoiler Alert!"
What do you mean by ‘guy on left’?
Well, of course i'm refering to the ANTIFA millennial in the parking lot taking a dump on top of your Prius.
51516 Thanks for the clarification! I like your name btw! Did google program you?
To me it's more like: why can't you revive him???
he should have read it by that time
What Naseem Nicholas Talib labors to illuminate in a highly organized manner is: at least partly understood intuitively by most folks, in some parts. This is why his academic exercise on the chosen concepts resonate so well. E.g. The Yogi Berra quote, which itself resonates so well because it encapsulates the obvious in a comical rememberable way. Where Me Talib excels is he objectively examines and chronicles these ideas, some well known and some not so well known. IOW we all have an institutional understanding developed over centuries of experience that is not formally passed by wrote absolutes repeated and tested on. I love his books because they're like a statistical model. You may uncover unrealized correlations, but if the model is Amy good, it also confirms the obvious. He's a delight to read and I hope he continues to find motivation and reason to continue his exploration and documentation of interesting aspects of our human condition.
Despite his rather harsh ways this is what a genious sounds like: very sophisticated ideas with complex and imense impact; delivered in short, concise, very easy concepts.
Really. Cause I don't understand wtf this guy is trying to say at 12 minutes in. Fascinating, but utterly confusing.
@@harryheart6018 thats on u m8
This guy is a freaking genius.
Except for his misinformed opinions on actual science. I'd go out of my way to punch him in the face.
47:17 The most important point in this discussion, by far! 😎✌️
47:50 - hair in the game
This man is a freaking polymath. He wrote shit in a old school volume style like a freaking G
I like his writing and some of his observations are in my view, bang on the money. The best bit of this video is the guy who puts him right about the peacock's tail...a lesson in irony; if only Taleb was an expert on animals.
48:39 Taleb on deadlifting and speaking on the risk of his own advice .
I love Taleb's books, but whenever I hear him speak I have no idea wtf he is talking about.
❤hahah same!
Fantastic, Taleb's ideas are powerful and profound.
Just read the book ! Nassim is my favourite modern thinker, but listening to him discuss his ideas is like listening to Mozart mangled by an 8 year old.
i think that is part of why he is an author so that it forces him to flesh out all those different ideas running around in his head
Seems like he was nervous at first. First few minutes were bad but around minute 10 he became more articulate. I'm glad I didn't skip this talk too soon.
Yazen Kashlan you don’t watch Taleb for his articulation but rather his wisdom and disses.
other Way around?
He actually at some point have non-smoke related throat cancer .. This explain his way of speaking .. regardless no one can deny the wisdom presented.
Mr. Taleb, Google has changed in the past 6 years, they are the IYI now.
“Keep the volume down on that bitching, Flatch Adams”
- Sgt. Lincoln Osiris
17:45 man we learned that the hard way in 2020. Love this guy!
This is a brilliant guy. Love what he has to say on war. My own take on it is this - if you want to go to war in some foreign land, cash out all your assets, grab a gun, and get in the front line. Otherwise shut the hell up.
See Harry Browne Constitutional Peace Amendment that addresses this
@@joeblow2387 yea thanks for sharing. Unfortunately very few of the relevant rulers give a rat's a$$ about the constitution as it is
@@JustinPavoni I year ago I would have disagreed. I am from the "duck and cover" generation. The last year has been a real eye opener for me. More than COVID, the things I have learned about almost every institution I thought I could trust has left me pretty demoralized.
@@joeblow2387 Duck and cover ain't gonna do shit if a bomb hits. Kinda like staying isolated inside with a mask on your face and a bankrupt business is going to make you more likely to get sick from a virus (not less). Everything the media says is a lie. Big business and government are an organized crime partnership. It's much worse than you think and it has always been this way. Best thing to understand is that it's all about the media and the banking system. Listen to a guy named Ryan Dawson - best reporter I have found on the internet. Stay out of debt. Buy gold and silver and keep it at home. And support as many small and independent businesses as possible (ideally use metals to transact). That is how you beat them (starve them by not patronizing their weapon - central banking and fiat money).
sweet its the same talk he did with Naval.
Translation of “skin in the game game” into German would be “Die eigene Haut riskieren” “to risk ones own skin”. However most Germans would understand and prefer the English version
I think that you're taking quite a bit of a leap there by going too literal. To have "skin in the game" is vastly different from having "YOUR skin in the game". Damn German articles! :D
Had it been up to me I'd have translated it into "Wer nicht wagt...", the beginning of the German phrase "Wer nicht wagt, der nicht gewinnt." which, again loosely, translates to "You can't win, unless you take chances."
While I totally agree that having skin in the game is so important, to say that an action is justifiable if those who advocate for it are willing to pay the price if they are wrong (57:36) is complete nonsense. For any stupid idea, you will find idiots who are willing to put their skin in the game, but does that mean the action is justifiable?
By that logic terrorist actions are justifiable because the ones who do them have put skin in the game.
Well, I think it's not about the outcome itself..but the degree of expertise.
Wouldn't you trust a terrorist to kill people if he's prepared to kill himself along with those people?
That makes him an expert terrorist. Sound weird when I write that😂
Plus, you also need to look at it with Talebs idea of convexity.
@@codenameHara Wait, but the point was if it's justifiable, not about expertise. I think the Q & A at the mentioned timestamp are clear on that.
If we deviate to expertise, and I repeat that this is something else, I would say not necessary. I agree "skin in the game" is a necessary condition, but not a sufficient one. He can have "skin in the game", but be the worst terrorist ever. I guess would be hard to find a good one based on previous experience :)
I heard of him via the Black Swan but never listened to any of his talks. Very insightful man. I will buy his book.
Literally never seen him so calm and agreeable lmao
You mean in the flesh or on twitter
49:04 yes lifting and mobility can help recover from injury
Will i able to understand the book(I am not smart) or what can I do to understand it ?
Give them a shot mate!
Ok. I am leaving this comment just as I bring up the presentation. I am familiar w/ Mr. Taleb's work and the fact he was one of very few who predicted the market crash in '08.
I will definitely be reading this book when I get a chance because if his premise is that people across the socio-economic strata need to feel like they have skin in the game for a free society (or any society really) to work then I agree whole heartedly. "Skin in the game" has been a go to talking point for me for like a year or so now. And I am just super pschyed to hear someone else say it! Plus his audience is way bigger than mine. (God bless all my coworkers for listening politely, they're good people)
Changing minds is both the hardest and easiest thing a person can do.
He put up chapters of it on Medium, but not everything is there. I recommend it, as well as Antifragile to anyone
Thanks for the reply. Never knew about the website.
Surf your insight C.D. - take action! Stay curious and full of courage - E.V. Hodge.
20:20 He just explained why the entire education system of the world is eroding.
LMAO at that angry peacock guy
Actual RAGE. Funnily enough, he doesnt get the point of actual use as in: being able to actually fight a predator, or just signaling that you could. Which is exactly the point.
He’s such a pea(cock!)
That guy must be dumber than a rock
Scaring off predators IS useful.
@@lucifermorningstar4595 He's right though. And a better example would be anteloupes doing showy jumps in front of predators.
I just adored this,very helpful I have so many questions and nobody but Google to ask. I'm going to read your books asap because I'm super confused and the anxiety about this path is intense.
if you are not a person with tech/math background, i would highly recommend going through Khan Academy's statistics playlist before reading his books :)
You will find it comes down to simple ethics.
Interesting comment that society should move back to the apprentice model for building relevant skills
2:43 modus operandi: a particular way or method of doing something, especially one that is characteristic or well-established.
I would read this guy's books... but they are too new. I won't know if they are any good for another 1000 years.
Then go read Seneca and feel the bliss
I was expecting a technical graphics talk about rendering of skin in games.
The answer about Truth was very deep. truths that are useful and impact individuals in society will eventually survive. And I guess that happens through through mutiny and/or overthrowing of a regime or change in Governing party
20:31 Talking about Robert Shiller. A good friend of his.
I made it 34 minutes deep. My dude is probably more charismatic on paper.
Great for a bike ride... No need for him to be interesting. The takeaway is to only read the last chapter of his book, "Skin in the game." He didn't get to this point until almost the end.
I'd be psyched to see this philosopher in person!
philosopher, really?
@@thriversoffset village idiot, hello, so happy your here!
"Skin in the Game" in german = "seine Haut aufs Spiel setzen". There is a german bishop, Reinhard Marx, who wrote a book on economics called "The Capital / Das Kapital", drawing a lot from the concept, 2 years before the Black Swan came out.
Someone was pretty enthusiastic about correcting a figurative description of a peacock tail.
dude really went up there thinking he's contributing to the discussion
it wasn't figurative and Taleb does the same shit.
@JimboParadox scaring away predators while it not actually being useful in a fight is signalling.
Thanks, guy in green at 51:49, for letting us know you have a degree at evolutionary biology.
A narcissist attended Taleb's talk? What a coincidence!
i must attempt his book(s), especially considering the initial statements. Although many of his examples in this talk were smashers, some did not make sense to me ( I felt the questioners delivered some valid critique). 'i take risks - i make tweets' (?). the unsubtle knife. I guess it depend on ones point of view, ones priestly height "bumfff" as he lands back to earth. scales of risk. 'Soldiers in Normandy' - risk of death was great here but i'm sure the majority of soldiers were 'actually' there under gravity of duty (draft) rather than wonder lust - although it may have been exciting, terrifying, empowering for them,, war and young men etc. He talks about levels of risk but understands this differently to me (cos its complex). But there were some great observation and he did talk of scales of risk. evolutionary edies can burst new banks. rococo - baroque - classasicm - modernism - contemporism. His swing at the world hacks a mark but his nose seems very bloody - the cost of his in-elegance? But still there were some great observations and I will read on! thanks.
Nassim needs to study Algorithmic Probability. Indeed, Google needs to study it relation to "bias" or Google may find itself subject to draconian governmental intervention.
My response to the UK government's initiative on "bias" in algorithmic decision-making by its "Center for Data Ethics and Innovation":
The missing ingredient in remediating bias is that we use data to recognize bias, including bias in the data itself. Any serious experimentalist understands this: Measurement instruments must be modeled along with the measurements they report. The solution to this apparent conundrum in data analysis has been known since the early 1960s: Algorithmic Information Theory. In short, to discover bias in the data, one must strive to approximate its Kolmogorov Complexity program as model selection criterion: The smallest program that outputs the data embodies the best model, including the best model of bias in the data. Multiple measurement instruments provide the cross-checking data necessary to discover bias. Since entire disciplines can be biased, this means cross-disciplinary measurements must be included in a comprehensive corpus to be compressed.
Aside from the fact that this is _the_ right way to discover bias in the data, it has the additional benefit of resolving the political conundrum entailed by vague model selection criteria for adoption in public policy.
www.gov.uk/government/publications/interim-reports-from-the-centre-for-data-ethics-and-innovation/interim-report-review-into-bias-in-algorithmic-decision-making
I click on everythink new with Nassim N. Taleb!
06:40 "What is recent will be replaced by something more recent." Technology.
"Whether its readable or not they pay the price."
I like this boomer :D
Although, Nassim books are on the top of favorites, but based on his idea they won’t survive because there can be summarized:
Skin in the game: if people can transfer risks and not own their risk, the system will fail. The minority can always rule the majority..
Antifragile: the same way a muscle will gain from pressure in the gym , transfer this concept to other domains.
Always think micro at the bottom and go macro as you widen/grow.
Bingo two books summarized in 1 mns
Now do "Black Swan...."
Amazing how he can be so smart, yet listening to him is like swimming through a pool of rusty nails.
dear sir madam or zir, listen to non-echo-chamber-content more frequently.
It's a fair point. He's brilliant though.
Actually he wrote about this...Its pure intention :)
Jeremylan Definitely not as smart as he thinks he is.
@Sam Fortune He's in his own category. Like the you need to pay money to read my thoughts category.
With all due a respect but you can also simply see Libya and Iraq as Kadafi and Hussein paying their prices for taking crazy sociopathic risks with lives of tens of thousands of others which is well documented. And obviously interventions had some tragic consequences but the outcome was not known for sure beforehand and most of farther damage was done by agents of fallen and other active regims. So and obviously macro bs' rule and other of Taleb's wisdom you can apply even to Taleb. Thank you for it
This man is so fucking intelligent I love listening to this stuff!
bad attribution to darwin taleb
he never said survival of the fittest, the concept is that their is no genetic makeup that is superior to another but that there is a specific adaptation for each individual environment. kind of like a hummindbird
"If a book is boring - close it"
It's wrong on many levels.
what a dumb question he asked
He talks as if he was high. When you are high you get the most interesting and genuine ideas, it's like a firework - but you forget each within 5 seconds. You start a sentence and by the time you get to the end of the sentence you don't know what the heck you were trying o say. At least that's what I was told by people who smoke weed.
this is true
23:15
Hammurabi was ruler of Babylon between 1792 to 1750 B.C.E.
The books that have endured the test of time must therefore hold some kind of survival truths.
would have loved to hear the complete explanation about the holy trinity 36:22
if a book can be summerized, it is not worth reading: you read the summary. 1:05
When he said journalists in oppressive regimes I waited for him to mention his middle-eastern brothers but he never did, he only mentioned Latin America 38:20. Another example that shows that however smart people are they always flock to their own kind (race). Although he looks more like Socrates than middle-eastern.
I don't understand the surgeon example of who to pick. You pick the one that looks like the butcher? Because he had to overcome more? Can someone clarify thanks!
I thought it meant that if you don't look the part (i.e. the stereotype) and still made it, you clearly had to work a lot harder at it.
What about George Orwell's 1984?
Didn't that major book written in 1947 anticipate on the future ?
So,by way of consequence some books are also written to perceive and understand the future
Nobody predicted Google but Douglas Adams did create the Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which was a continually revised universally online volume which was electronically accessed. Now, maybe google looks a little tame by comparison.
When he mentions at around 11 minutes “people who come from theory and go into practice blow up” does he mean it in a negative way in that they can’t handle the reality of practice or in a positive way as in they are really successful?
he meant In a negative way
@56:10 Google no longer hires from universities?
The reason why Google are Genius at the past and future is because they realise that folk are curious and want to communicate to each other. Taleb's genius is that the past is the future which means humans want stability and security. And Googles genius is that the future will be faster than the past, faster communication till it is instantaneous. Google's genius is that in the future they will know what you are going to think before you do which is great because a lot of folk do not know what they want in life. This can solve a lot of wrong decision making if done correctly. What do you think?
the past is the future? you're living in mediocristan lol
@@ahmedreads1794 Thanks for your comment. And if you study history you will know (as I am sure you do) that the speed of communication is everything. Think of the speed of knowing a company reports lower sales or an enemy signals it is going to war. Speed of communication is everything in the 21st century. In 1880 or 1930 the speed of communication was a lot slower but the first people to get that information had an advantage. History has taught that you only need a 5% advantage to clean up. Haha.
I wonder how certain types of philosopher - certain types of metaphysician, say - could have skin in the game? Aren't there kinds or levels of theory that just can't really be approached in this way?
But yeah, great lecture.
falsification creates the standard ...thx Karl
@@alletklameista But isn't the point that they don't suffer if/when they get things wrong? Their points may be falsifiable, and may be in fact false, and may even have been shown to be false by some critic or other - the philosopher can ignore that criticism, or fail to see its validity, or not even be aware of it; the philosopher can therefore keep making the same points, and not suffer at all as a consequence.
@@benjamingeorgecoles8060 reputation maybe?
@@alletklameista Yeah, I guess reputation goes some way to fulfilling this role. Maybe a key point is just that it's harder for everyone to know what's right in those very abstract discussions. That's probably a reason to be suspicious of them, or especially cautious with them.
I really really want to know more about this book but listening to the author speaking is a torture especially when I'm a non-English mother tongue 😅
As a non mother tongue speaker, I prefer to listen to non mother tongue speakers because they speak clearer.
Google quite literally gives itself "freedom of expression" awards. The group that "gave them" that "award" is a google product.
So many I-will-never-be-Talebs on the comment section.
Adorable.
Interesting that comments are turned off for his anti-fragile talk-especially considering his comments on state intervention on medicine! Extreme and temporary. For some reason, I cannot view replies to my comments. I have checked my community settings-grateful for any advice-please post as a separate comment. Thank you.
Question: politicians are judged by voters, who are their customers. Still they take really bad decisions? How do we explain this again?
To be effective, feedback needs to be as quick as possible. At one time in our history, two, four, or six years were a short time, but not now. One science-fiction story posited a leader who could do whatever they wanted, but was subject to immediate feedback via implants, and if enough people gave negative feedback it could be quite painful.
He has an interesting manner about him
Go"We fired Damore"ogle
And Zack Vorhies
I'm reminded of marriages for alliances. Fusion of fates.
This is btw the German version
Me as A German, oh yeah that's indeed German :D I just recognized it after he told so :D
Great mind!! Keep going nassim
26:40
Good to know I am not the only one with anxiety attacks.
I wonder if Taleb's Darwinian logic can apply to something like, say, affirmative action policies in University and grad school admissions. Here, I'm thinking of those students from marginalized backgrounds who encounter intense adversity in their life, but who manage to perform at high levels nonetheless. It seems like those students should have an advantage in admissions according to Darwinian survival. Because if those students perform well despite the psychological, social, and educational barriers they have faced, then there must be something about them that helped them overcome that. Perhaps they're highly intelligent, hardworking, persistent, creative, or some combination of traits. So this is all to say that students from adverse backgrounds have proven themselves to be especially "fit," in a Darwinian sense; otherwise, they would not have survived, say, getting through an undergrad degree with a high GPA etc. It seems like there is an argument for selecting the "best" through AA policies somewhere in there (but only for those that have struggled profusely but have risen above it).
Of all the authors to make a comment like that how could you have forgotten to include Luck in your screed
@@gordongordon98 That's a fair point. And I don't want to claim that luck doesn't exist and isn't a factor. But I'm sure it's not the entire story either. I think Taleb would say the same (although I've only read part of fooled by randomness sadly).
@@manuelcastellanosjr4929 yes, absolutely not the entire story, but a main player in events. I just finished his books, I found them very interesting, and insightful. I hope you are able to read them too.
Cheers
@@gordongordon98 Yes, definitely, and I will get around to finishing it asap (even though it's kind of depressing). Cheers and good health to you and your loved ones during Covid!
Kind of off the topic in my mind. He’s focusing on removing “barriers”, as risks were not fall upon the risk takers, it created a barrier between the takers and the consequences. That might sound Darwinian but it’s not exactly that. He clarified his point about “inequality” by pointing out he was concerned with “elevators”, in which the moment you got in, you are done. In which case the conversation should shift toward things like is Ivy League really a good idea for society and so on.
In any case, helping disadvantageous groups has never been a problem or in need of justification. This might be a digression about the controversy, but the complain about AA in America was controversial because of its focus on racial elements rather than purely background.