8 /10 1 Votes8
Country United States Series Incerto Media type Print, e-book | 4/5 Goodreads Language English Publication date 2001 Originally published 2001 Page count 316 OCLC 60349198 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Similar Nassim Nicholas Taleb books, Finance books |
Fooled by randomness book review
Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets is a book by Nassim Nicholas Taleb that deals with the fallibility of human knowledge. The book is the first part of Taleb's four-volume philosophical essay on uncertainty, titled the Incerto. The following books include: The Black Swan (2007–2010), The Bed of Procrustes (2010-2016), and Antifragile (2012).
Contents
- Fooled by randomness book review
- Nassim nicholas taleb talks at google
- Thesis
- Reaction
- Editions
- References
Nassim nicholas taleb talks at google
Thesis
Taleb sets forth the idea that modern humans are often unaware of the existence of randomness. They tend to explain random outcomes as non-random.
Human beings:
- overestimate causality, e.g., they see elephants in the clouds instead of understanding that they are in fact randomly shaped clouds that appear to our eyes as elephants (or something else);
- tend to view the world as more explainable than it really is. So they look for explanations even when there are none.
Other misperceptions of randomness that are discussed include:
Reaction
The book was selected by Fortune as one of the 75 "Smartest Books of All Time." U.S.A Today recounted that many criticisms raised in this book of the financial industry turned out to be justified. Forbes admitted to the book being playful, self-effacing and at times insufferably arrogant, but always thought provoking. The Wall Street Journal (one of the publications that Taleb pokes fun at in his book) called Universa Investments' buys in October 2008 a "Black Swan gain" (alluding to the Black Swans mentioned in the book). The New Yorker (one of the publications which receives more favourable comments in this book) said that the book was to conventional Wall Street wisdom what Martin Luther’s ninety-nine [sic] theses were to the Catholic Church.