The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable

by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable
book data
1,734 ratings, 3.63 average rating, 488 reviews (more data...)
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published
April 17th 2007 by Random House

binding
Hardcover, 400 pages

isbn
1400063515    (isbn13: 9781400063512)

description
Bestselling author Nassim Nicholas Taleb continues his exploration of randomness in his fascinating new book, The Black Swan, in which he examines the...more




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Nina
12/30/07
Nina rated it: 1 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2008
It took a lot of willpower to not put this book down. This guy could have written a very interesting 5-page essay on his main idea, which is that people overestimate their ability to predict the future and that unexpected, extraordinary events - of whose occurrence we do not even know the probability, since the event is usually outside the realm of what we think is possible - are in the end what really matter. Instead, he took this solid (and unoriginal, I might add) idea, gave it a clever nam...more
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  3 comments

Nick
07/18/08
Nick rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0141034599)

Read in August, 2008
This is a great book. And, to take a page from Taleb, anyone who doesn't think so is wrong.

No, no, there are a number of problems with the book. A bit bloated, a bit repetitive. And NNT does make the misstep every once and a while. To take a very small instance, Taleb bases a short section of the book upon the idea that to be "hardened by the Gulag" means to become "harder" or "stronger" rather than its true meaning of someone who has become inured to ce...more
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Aaron
04/19/08
Aaron rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in June, 2008
recommended to Aaron by: Zach
recommends it for: Zach
This is a book that raises a number of very important questions, but chief among them is definitely the question of how the interplay between a good idea and an insufferable author combine to effect the reading experience?

This author is an a-hole. Full stop. He's dismissive, chronically insecure, unstructured and hostile towards his detractors. He engages in what may be the lowest form of rhetoric by pre-emptively attacking any critics (even before they've had the chance to come...more
Like this review?   yes   (7 people liked it)
  2 comments

Adih Respati
Read in August, 2007
Black Swan, huge-impact improbable events (the success of google, attack of 9/11, invention of internet), shows that social sciences fail to predict various events (behaviors inculuded) by,and so far by merely , usingGaussian "bell curve" approach. The use of mathematics in social sciences overestimates what we know (observed past events)and underestimates what we don't (probable future events): too little science papers succeeded to make (near) accurate predictions; and successful inv...more
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  1 comment

Greg
12/21/07
Greg rated it: 2 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2008
This book has diminishing returns on the time spent reading it. Taleb's jeremiad is directed against - well - everyone who is not as enlightened as he is. I trudged through this book because - well - everyone is reading it and enlightened people should know how to comment on it. There, I did it. Now I can look down on all those people out there who aren't enlightened like Taleb. And now, me.

Taleb is actually on to something important if you can tolerate his self-importance enoug...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  1 comment

Will
07/17/08
Will rated it: 2 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2008
This review will be comprised of two parts: a review of the ideas presented and a review of the way in which it is written

(A) The ideas

There is no question here, Taleb is an erudite and intelligent scholar. His take on epistomology and the scientific method breathe fresh air into the subject and gloss it with some 21st century context.

It would be difficult for me to overstate the importance of the black swan problem in modern life and the degree to which we a...more
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rmn
06/21/08
rmn rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in May, 2008
I can summarize this book in two words: Shit happens.

Actually, I should be more fair since the author spent 300 pages laying out his beliefs and arguing his conclusions. The real summary of this book should be: Shit happens more often than you think.

The author, Taleb, rails against economics, most philosophers, and the way we incorporate news to allow us to make sense of events and everyday happenings. He wants us to unlearn the way we think and learn, while destroying...more
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  1 comment

nanto
02/05/09
nanto added it

nyari buku hegel malah dapat buku ini yang terjemahannya. ada beberapa kalimatnya yang menggelitik maka tertarik deh.:D

*sampe bab 1*
Ide buku ini menarik.

Black Swan adalah sebuah metafora yang pertama saya pahami dari kajian filsafat ilmu dulu sewaktu kuliah. Karl Raimund Poper menggunakan metafora itu untuk menjelaskan konsepsinya tentang falsifikasi. Di dunia ini, manusia cenderung percaya untuk mengatakan angsa putih adalah kebenaran. Keguncangan pada kebenaran it...more
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Ben
03/08/08
Ben rated it: 1 of 5 stars

bookshelves: shit
Read in April, 2008
If you skipped your Systems, Statistics, or Random Variables classes in college, or if you think you know more than everyone else on Wall Street, then read this book. It will reaffirm what you already know. To the rest of you: this book will reaffirm what you thought you knew when you were 5 or 6...with an updated vocabulary.

I put this book down after the first chapter, but thought I would give it another chance, that I was being unfair. When I read the second chapter (which is ...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  8 comments

Todd
12/09/07
Todd rated it: 1 of 5 stars

recommends it for: Nerds
I only read the first 13 pages of this book, plus the prologue, but that was enough. In the first few pages he name-drops people like Umberto Eco and Nabokov, tells us about people that were rather unknown five years ago (but forgets to tell us that they are still rather unknown now), and compares himself to people in history who are/were actually influential. For a man who claims he is not writing an autobiography, he really works hard to impress the reader. He adds little bits of information i...more
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  2 comments

Orange
11/26/07
Orange rated it: 2 of 5 stars

Read in June, 2007
Perhaps the problem was that I began with high expectations.

Taleb, who I presume can understand Arabic at its most elementary level, regularly refers to Muslims as \"Moslems,\" which irritates me to no end.

The book became tedious and self-contradictory at times, and I felt that it had an engrossing theory, yes, but it was poorly executed. The prose did not capture my interest, and his examples seemed to imitate (badly) the anecdotal style of Blink or Freakonomi...more
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todd
05/27/07
todd rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in May, 2007
The Black Swan

This is one of those “must read” books that many more people will claim to have read than will actually slog through. Like with Fooled by Randomness, Taleb takes many more pages than necessary to get his important points across. Those points are that we have incredibly poor skills at estimating extreme events, we regularly abuse historical statistics in ways that set us up to fail miserably, and we should have a great distrust of most planning processes. The ulti...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  1 comment

Misha
05/18/07
Misha rated it: 2 of 5 stars

bookshelves: tried-to-read
Read in January, 2008
This book is a weird mix of novel ideas, bragging, and pseudo-science.

Taleb makes a strong case for his theory of black swans. It's an interesting and valuable theory but it's also one that could be communicated in a short conversation and does not need a whole book to contain it.

Taleb fills the rest of the pages by bragging about his own success and ridiculing established philosophers, economists, and anyone else he can think of. I'm not in any position to judge his ...more
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Bernard
01/13/09
Bernard rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2008
This was my first encounter with Nassim Taleb. The writing has a hint of condescension that would be more irritating if his points weren't so interesting. This guy is either great to have at dinner or an arrogant ass. Probably both on the same night.

The basic idea behind the book is that the observational methods that underpin science can't prove the non-existence of an object/event. To make matters worse, human cognition is driven by heuristics instead of perfect memorization of ...more
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Daniel
08/23/08
Daniel rated it: 2 of 5 stars

I stopped reading this because the author is so pompous and annoying.
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
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Paula
06/18/08
Paula rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in June, 2008
Have you read a book recently that blew your mind every other page? Because that's what "Black Swan" did to me. Basically, Taleb takes everything you learned in Econ and Statistics 101 and throws it out the window (which made me feel better, because I didn't do so well in Stats).

There's only one main idea in this book: events in society are becoming increasingly random and unpredictable. We've moved from a world of averages to a world of extremes, and we have no way of gue...more
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Beth (M) mowry
07/26/07
Beth (M) mowry rated it: 3 of 5 stars

bookshelves: enlightening
Read in July, 2007
This is a long discussion of why human events are so unpredictable. The Black Swan represents an extremely unlikely event (a black swan being thought of as genetically impossible) such as 9/11. The more unpredictable it is, the greater its consequences. The author grew up in Lebanon during its 15 year civil war and did a lot of reading while staying alive in basements ("war is extreme monotony punctuated by extreme terror") and it's understandable that he became devoted to the study o...more
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Atif
03/15/09
Atif rated it: 1 of 5 stars

the books takes you on a very complex journey but at the end, brings you down to point one. One would say, why the hell did i went through the entire journey when I what I wanted to see could be verbally explained in one line...this book even though has some good things in parts but on the whole it portrays that all the theories of science, economics, business studies are rubbish and we should only focus on the so called greatest subject of philosophy.
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David
11/29/07
David rated it: 2 of 5 stars

bookshelves: read-in-2007
Read in December, 2007
Nassim Taleb's earlier book "Fooled by Randomness" was enormously successful - deservedly so, in my opinion. Unfortunately, this second book is a complete disappointment. Despite its length, it adds very little of interest to the material in the first book. Much of it is a rambling and indulgent rehash of ideas already developed adequately in the first book. If you are looking for fresh insight, spare your money.

Taleb is a very smart guy. In the first book, he wrote fluidly...more
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Tracy Van Dorpe
06/22/07
Tracy Van Dorpe rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in July, 2007
this book is causing quite the stir among economics departments and business school finance faculties (and money managers). it's like they have a visceral reaction to critiques of their professional assumptions. anyway, the feedback i got from an mit prof was that there's nothing actionable in his recommendations. as a complit person, what i found hardest to swallow was the rejection of narrative and how humans make the random universe reasonable. while taleb's argument on randomness and bla...more
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