Ratings20
Average rating3.6
This books is exclusively aphorisms. Dont expect any information beyond you finding the meaning to the quotes themselves. There are some great quotes here that you should take actively abide by but there are some significant themes (finance) that constantly reappear that detract from the overall meaning.
Confessions Cum Review.
at least 30% of the contents will require repeated reading to understand the deep meaning in his words. I must confess he is a genius and very smart person. (Conclusion from what I understood from his readings).
30% u will understand easily and it is awesome to come across these writing.
A really interesting collection of aphorisms on several parts of life. Quite enlightening and helping while still being really easy to read. There are real pearls of wisdoms in this book that you can always come back to at different moments of your life.
Taleb is fascinating. How does a guy who relentlessly attacks the credibility of economists and academics get invited to speak in front of them so often? He's utterly arrogant and abrasive, yet he has a certain appeal that is difficult to explain. Part of it undoubtedly stems from his main idea that revolves around “how we deal, and should deal, with what we don't know.” It is interesting and applicable to so many aspects of life; investing, politics, literature, philosophy and more and since it is, by his own admission, all he talks about, it makes him really interesting to listen to.
A lot of his aphorisms deal with what it takes to be clever, witty, magnificent, generous, erudite and humble, himself being the implied example for each of these. Through his arrogance though, there seems to be a certain insecurity about him. He constantly criticizes people who are not like him (anyone who works out in gyms or uses technology heavily, all economists, people who are over 30 and still employed or not wealthy etc.) while justifying his own lifestyle. His wisdom often feels more like a recipe for how to live like Taleb rather than any transcendental truth. Still, there are plenty of good ones, for example:
“There is no intermediate state between ice and water but there is one between life and death: employment”
“You don't become completely free just by avoiding to be a slave; you also need to avoid becoming a master.”
“There are two types of people: those who try to win and those who try to win arguments. They are never the same.”
“Every social association that is not face to face is injurious to your health.”
“Randomness is indistinguishable from complicated, undetected, and undetectable order; but order itself is indistinguishable from artful randomness.”
“They agree that chess training only improves chess skills but disagree that classroom training (almost) only improves classroom skills.”
So some are good, pithy, insightful etc.; what an aphorism should be, and while the book is worth reading, it's pretty hit or miss, far from the master of the aphorism, Nicolás Gómez Dávila.