Nassim Nicholas Taleb — "You can tell how uninteresting a person is by asking him whom he finds interesti…"
You can tell how uninteresting a person is by asking him whom he finds interesting.
You can tell how uninteresting a person is by asking him whom he finds interesting.
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"dessert... in his opinion they're 'crap' and he will only eat Lebanese pastries."
"The greatest minds are those who can simplify complex ideas without distorting them."
"Beware of people who take themselves too seriously."
"A BS detection heuristic would be to use education in reverse: hire, conditional on an equal set of skills, the person with the least label-oriented education. In addition, people who didn't go to Har…"
"The difference between the rich and the poor is that the rich don't work for money—they make money work for them."
Lebanese-American probabilist and The Black Swan (2007) author whose work on tail risk and antifragility reshaped finance and policy thinking. Closely associated with Benoit Mandelbrot (fractal mathematician, Taleb's mentor figure). For an intellectual contrast, see Steven Pinker, Harvard psychologist and The Better Angels of Our Nature author — Taleb has spent the 2010s publicly attacking Pinker's data-driven 'things are getting better' optimism as naive Gaussian thinking under fat-tailed reality — the loudest public statistics argument of the decade.
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