Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Nassim Nicholas Taleb | |
---|---|
Born | 12 September 1960 Amioun, Lebanon | (age 64)
Nationality | Lebanese and American |
Alma mater |
|
Known for | Applied epistemology, antifragility, black swan theory, ludic fallacy, antilibrary |
Awards | Bruno Leoni Award, Wolfram Innovator Award |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Decision theory, risk, probability |
Institutions | New York University Tandon School of Engineering, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences |
Thesis | The Microstructure of Dynamic Hedging (1998) |
Doctoral advisor | Hélyette Geman |
Website | fooledbyrandomness |
Nassim Nicholas Taleb[a] (/ˈtɑːləb/; alternatively Nessim or Nissim; born 12 September 1960) is a Lebanese-American essayist, mathematical statistician, former option trader, risk analyst, and aphorist.[1][2] His work concerns problems of randomness, probability, and uncertainty.
Taleb is the author of the Incerto, a five-volume philosophical essay on uncertainty published between 2001 and 2018 (notably, The Black Swan and Antifragile). He has been a professor at several universities, serving as a Distinguished Professor of Risk Engineering at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering since September 2008.[3][4][5][6][7] He has been co-editor-in-chief of the academic journal Risk and Decision Analysis since September 2014. He has also been a practitioner of mathematical finance, a hedge fund manager, and a derivatives trader, and is currently listed as a scientific adviser at Universa Investments.[8] The Sunday Times called his 2007 book The Black Swan one of the 12 most influential books since World War II.[9]
Taleb criticized the risk management methods used by the finance industry and warned about financial crises, subsequently profiting from the late-2000s financial crisis.[10][11] He advocates what he calls a "black swan robust" society, meaning a society that can withstand difficult-to-predict events.[12] He proposes what he has termed "antifragility" in systems; that is, an ability to benefit and grow from a certain class of random events, errors, and volatility,[13][14] as well as "convex tinkering" as a method of scientific discovery, by which he means that decentralized experimentation outperforms directed research.[15][16]
Early life and family background
Taleb was born in Amioun, Lebanon, to Minerva Ghosn and Nagib Taleb,[17] an oncologist and a researcher in anthropology. His parents were of Antiochian Greek descent,[18] holding French citizenship. His grandfather, Fouad Nicolas Ghosn , and his great-grandfather, Nicolas Ghosn , were both deputy prime ministers in the 1940s through the 1970s. His paternal grandfather Nassim Taleb was a supreme court judge and his great-great-great-great-grandfather, Ibrahim Taleb (Nabbout), was a governor of Mount Lebanon in 1866.[19][20][21] Taleb attended a French school there, the Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais in Beirut.[22][23] His family saw its political prominence and wealth reduced by the Lebanese Civil War, which began in 1975.[24] He is a Greek Orthodox Christian.[25]
Education
Taleb received his bachelor and Master of Science degrees from the University of Paris.[26] [clarification needed (see talk)] He holds an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania (1983),[22][10] and a PhD in management science from the University of Paris (Dauphine) (1998),[27] under the direction of Hélyette Geman.[27] His dissertation focused on the mathematics of derivatives pricing.[27][28]
According to a profile in Le Monde, Taleb claims to read in ten languages.[29]
Finance view
Taleb has been a practitioner of mathematical finance,[30] a hedge fund manager,[12][31][32] and a derivatives trader.[22][33][34] He is a scientific adviser at Universa Investments.
Taleb considers himself less a businessman than an epistemologist of randomness, and says that he used trading to attain independence and freedom from authority.[35] He advocated for tail risk hedging,[36] which is intended to mitigate investors' exposure to extreme market moves. His business model has been to safeguard investors against crises while reaping rewards from rare events, and thus his investment management career has included several jackpots followed by lengthy dry spells.[22]
He has also held the following positions:[37][38][39] managing director and proprietary trader at Credit Suisse UBS, worldwide chief proprietary arbitrage derivatives trader for currencies, commodities and non-dollar fixed income at First Boston, chief currency derivatives trader for Banque Indosuez, managing director and worldwide head of financial option arbitrage at CIBC Wood Gundy, derivatives arbitrage trader at Bankers Trust (now Deutsche Bank), proprietary trader at BNP Paribas, independent option market maker on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and founder of Empirica Capital.
Taleb reportedly became financially independent after the crash of 1987[22] and was successful during the Nasdaq dive in 2000[35] as well as the financial crisis that began in 2007,[10] a development he attributed to the mismatch between reality and statistical distributions used in finance. After that crisis, Taleb became an activist for what he called a "black swan robust society".[40][4] Since 2007 he has been a Principal/Senior Scientific Adviser at Universa Investments in Miami, Florida, a fund based on the "black swan" idea, owned and managed by former Empirica partner Mark Spitznagel. Some of its separate funds made returns of 65% to 115% in October 2008.[10][41] In a 2007 Wall Street Journal article, Taleb claimed he retired from trading in 2004 and became a full-time author.[42][contradictory][10] He describes the nature of his involvement as "totally passive" from 2010 on.[43]
Taleb attended the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos in 2009; at that event he had harsh words for bankers, suggesting that bankers' recklessness will not be repeated "if you have punishment".[44][45]
Academic career
Taleb changed careers and became a mathematical researcher and philosophical essayist in 2006,[37] and has held positions at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, at University of Massachusetts Amherst, at London Business School, and at Oxford University. He has been Distinguished Professor of Risk Engineering at New York University Tandon School of Engineering since 2008.[7][37][46][47] He was Distinguished Research Scholar at the Said Business School BT Center, University of Oxford from 2009 to 2013.[48]
Taleb is co-Editor in Chief of the academic journal Risk and Decision Analysis (since September 2014),[49] jointly teaches regular courses with Paul Wilmott in London (19th time, March 2015),[50] and occasionally participates in teaching courses toward the Certificate in Quantitative Finance.[51] He is also co-faculty at the New England Complex Systems Institute.[52]
Writing career
Taleb's five volume philosophical essay on uncertainty, titled Incerto, covers the following books: Fooled by Randomness (2001), The Black Swan (2007–2010), The Bed of Procrustes (2010), Antifragile (2012), and Skin in the Game (2018). It was originally published in November 2016 including only the first four books. The fifth book was added in August 2019.
His first non-technical book, Fooled by Randomness, about the underestimation of the role of randomness in life, published in 2001, was selected by Fortune as one of the smartest 75 books known.[53]
His second non-technical book, The Black Swan, about unpredictable events, was published in 2007, selling close to three million copies (as of February 2011). It spent 36 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller list,[54] 17 as hardcover and 19 weeks as paperback,[22][55] and was translated into 31 languages.[22] The book has been credited with predicting the banking and economic crisis of 2008.[18][56]
In a 2008 article in The Times, the journalist Bryan Appleyard described Taleb as "now the hottest thinker in the world".[33] Daniel Kahneman proposed the inclusion of Taleb's name among the world's top intellectuals, saying "Taleb has changed the way many people think about uncertainty, particularly in the financial markets. His book, The Black Swan, is an original and audacious analysis of the ways in which humans try to make sense of unexpected events."[57]
A book of aphorisms, The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms, was released in December 2010.
The fourth book of his Incerto series—Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder—was published in November 2012.[58]
The fifth book of his Incerto series—Skin in the Game: Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life—was published in February 2018.
Taleb's non-technical writing style has been described as mixing a narrative, often semi-autobiographical style with short philosophical tales and historical and scientific commentary. The sales of Taleb's first two books garnered an advance of $4 million, for a follow-up book on anti-fragility.[22]
Ideas and theories
Taleb's book The Bed of Procrustes summarizes the central problem: "we humans, facing limits of knowledge, and things we do not observe, the unseen and the unknown, resolve the tension by squeezing life and the world into crisp commoditized ideas". Taleb disagrees with Platonic (i.e., theoretical) approaches to reality to the extent that they lead people to have the wrong map of reality, rather than no map at all.[34] He opposes most economic and grand social science theorizing, which in his view, suffers acutely from the problem of overuse of Plato's theory of forms. Based on these and other constructions, he advocates for what he calls a "black swan robust" society, meaning a society that can withstand difficult-to-predict events.[12]
He has also proposed that biological, economic, and other systems exhibit an ability to benefit and grow from volatility—including particular types of random errors and events—a characteristic of these systems that he terms antifragility.[59][60] Relatedly, he also believes that universities are better at public relations and claiming credit than generating knowledge. He argues that knowledge and technology are usually generated by what he calls "stochastic tinkering" rather than by top-down directed research,[61][62]: 182 and has proposed option-like experimentation as a way to outperform directed research as a method of scientific discovery, an approach he terms convex tinkering.[58]: 181ff, 213ff, 236ff
Taleb has called for cancellation of the Nobel Prize in Economics, saying that the damage from economic theories can be devastating.[63][64] He opposes top-down knowledge as an academic illusion.[65] Together with Espen Gaarder Haug, Taleb asserts that option pricing is determined in a "heuristic way" by operators, not by a model, and that models are "lecturing birds on how to fly".[65] Teacher and author Pablo Triana has explored this topic with reference to Haug and Taleb,[66] and says that perhaps Taleb is correct to urge that banks be treated as utilities forbidden to take potentially lethal risks, while hedge funds and other unregulated entities should be able to do what they want.[67]
In his writings, Taleb has identified and discussed the error of comparing real-world randomness with the "structured randomness" in quantum physics where probabilities are computable or games of chance such as casino gambling in which the probabilities are purposefully constructed by the proprietors.[68][69][70][71] Taleb calls this the "ludic fallacy". He argues that predictive models suffer from Platonism, gravitating towards mathematical purity and failing to take some key ideas into account, such as: the impossibility of possessing all relevant information, that small unknown variations in the data can have a huge impact, and flawed theories/models that are based on empirical data and that fail to consider events that have not taken place, but could have taken place. Discussing the ludic fallacy in The Black Swan, he writes, "The dark side of the moon is harder to see; beaming light on it costs energy. In the same way, beaming light on the unseen is costly, in both computational and mental effort."
In the second edition of The Black Swan, he posited that the foundations of quantitative economics are faulty and highly self-referential. He states that statistics is fundamentally incomplete as a field, as it cannot predict the risk of rare events, a problem that is acute in proportion to the rarity of these events. With the mathematician Raphael Douady, he called the problem statistical undecidability (Douady and Taleb, 2010).[72]
Taleb has described his main challenge as mapping his ideas of "robustification" and "antifragility", that is, how to live and act in a world we do not understand and build robustness to black swan events. Taleb introduced the idea of the "fourth quadrant" in the exposure domain.[73] One of its applications is in his definition of the most effective (that is, least fragile) risk management approach: what he calls the "barbell strategy" which is based on avoiding the middle in favor of linear combination of extremes, across all domains from politics to economics to one's personal life. These are deemed by Taleb to be more robust to estimation errors. For instance, he suggests that investing money in 'medium risk' investments is pointless, because risk is difficult, if not impossible to compute. His preferred strategy is to be both hyper-conservative and hyper-aggressive at the same time. For example, an investor might put 80 to 90% of their money in extremely safe instruments, such as treasury bills, with the remainder going into highly risky and diversified speculative bets. An alternative suggestion is to engage in highly speculative bets with a limited downside.
Taleb asserts that by adopting these strategies a portfolio can be "robust", that is, gain a positive exposure to black swan events while limiting losses suffered by such random events.[74]: 207 Together with Donald Geman and Hélyette Geman, he modeled the "maximum entropy barbell" which consists in "to constrain only what can be constrained (in a robust manner) and to maximize entropy elsewhere", based on an insight by E. T. Jaynes that economic life increases in entropy under regulatory and other constraints.[75] Taleb also applies a similar barbell-style approach to health and exercise. Instead of doing steady and moderate exercise daily, he suggests that it is better to do a low-effort exercise such as walking slowly most of the time, while occasionally expending extreme effort. He claims that the human body evolved to live in a random environment, with various unexpected but intense efforts and much rest.[76]
He appeared as a special guest on The Ron Paul Liberty Report on 19 May 2017, and stated his support for a non-interventionist foreign policy.[77] Taleb subsequently appeared with Ron Paul[78] and Ralph Nader[79] on their respective shows in support of Skin in the Game, which was dedicated to both men.[80][81] After the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, however, Taleb publicly supported an aggressive response against Russia and denounced "naive libertarians, who think I'm like them because they like my books."[82]
Taleb wrote in Antifragile and in scientific papers[83] that if the statistical structure of habits in modern society differ too greatly from the ancestral environment of humanity, the analysis of consumption should focus less on composition and more on frequency. In other words, studies that ignore the random nature of supply of nutrients are invalid.
Taleb co-authored a paper with Yaneer Bar-Yam and Joseph Norman called Systemic risk of pandemic via novel pathogens – Coronavirus: A note. The paper published on 26 January 2020, took the position that the SARS-CoV-2 was not being taken seriously enough by policy makers and medical professionals.[84][85]
Criticism and reactions
Aaron Brown, an author, quantitative analyst and adjunct professor in finance at Yeshiva and Fordham Universities, said regarding The Black Swan that "the book reads as if Taleb has never heard of nonparametric methods, data analysis, visualization tools or robust estimation."[86] Nonetheless, he calls the book "essential reading" and urges statisticians to overlook the insults to get the "important philosophic and mathematical truths." Taleb replied in the second edition of The Black Swan that "One of the most common (but useless) comments I hear is that some solutions can come from 'robust statistics.' I wonder how using these techniques can create information where there is none".[87]: 353 Westfall and Hilbe in 2007 complained that Taleb's criticism is "often unfounded and sometimes outrageous."[88] Taleb, writes John Kay, "describes writers and professionals as knaves or fools, mostly fools. His writing is full of irrelevances, asides and colloquialisms, reading like the conversation of a raconteur rather than a tightly argued thesis. But it is hugely enjoyable – compelling but easy to dip into. Yet beneath his rage and mockery are serious issues. The risk management models in use today exclude the very events against which they claim to protect the businesses that employ them. These models import a veneer of technical sophistication ... Quantitative analysts have lulled corporate executives and regulators into an illusory sense of security."[89] Berkeley statistician David Freedman said that efforts by statisticians to refute Taleb's stance have been unconvincing.[90]
Taleb contends that statisticians can be pseudoscientists when it comes to risks of rare events and risks of blowups, and mask their incompetence with complicated equations.[91] This stance has attracted criticism: the American Statistical Association devoted the August 2007 issue of The American Statistician to The Black Swan. The magazine offered a mixture of praise and criticism for Taleb's main points, with a focus on Taleb's writing style and his representation of the statistical literature. Robert Lund, a mathematics professor at Clemson University, writes that in Black Swan, Taleb is "reckless at times and subject to grandiose overstatements; the professional statistician will find the book ubiquitously naive."[92] However, Lund acknowledges that "there are many points where I agree with Taleb," and writes that "the book is a must" for anyone "remotely interested in finance and/or philosophical probability."
Taleb and Nobel laureate Myron Scholes have traded personal attacks, particularly after Taleb's paper with Espen Gaarder Haug on why nobody used the Black–Scholes–Merton formula. Taleb said that Scholes was responsible for the financial crises of 2008, and suggested that "this guy should be in a retirement home doing Sudoku. His funds have blown up twice. He shouldn't be allowed in Washington to lecture anyone on risk."[4] Scholes retorted that Taleb simply "popularises ideas and is making money selling books". Scholes claimed that Taleb does not cite previous literature, and for this reason Taleb is not taken seriously in academia.[93] Haug and Taleb (2011) listed hundreds of research documents showing the Black–Scholes formula was not Scholes' at all, and argued that the economics establishment ignored literature by practitioners and mathematicians (such as Ed Thorp), who had developed a more sophisticated version of the formula.[94]
In an interview on Charlie Rose, Taleb said that he saw that none of the criticism he received for The Black Swan refuted his central point, which convinced him to protect his assets and those of his clients.[95]
Taleb's aggressive and clearly directed commentary against parts of the finance industry—e.g., stating at Davos in 2009 that he was "happy" that Lehman Brothers collapsed—has led to reports of personal attacks and possible threats.[96]
Honors
- 2009: Included on the Forbes magazine list of "Most Influential Management Gurus"[97]
- 2011: Included on the Bloomberg 50 most influential people in global finance[98]
- 2013, 2014, 2015: Included among most influential 100 thought leaders in the world by the Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute[99]
- 2016: Taleb received an honorary doctorate from the American University of Beirut.[100]
- 2018: Wolfram Innovator Award for contributions to decision making under complicated and less-idealized probabilistic structures using Mathematica.
Major works
Books
Incerto
Incerto is a group of works by Taleb as philosophical essays on uncertainty. It was bundled into a group of four works in November 2016 ISBN 978-0399590450. A fifth book, Skin in the Game, was published in February 2018. This fifth book is bundled with the other four works in July 2019 as Incerto (Deluxe Edition) ISBN 978-1984819819.
- Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets. New York: Random House. 2001. ISBN 978-0-8129-7521-5. Second ed., 2005. ISBN 1-58799-190-X.
- The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. New York: Random House and Penguin Books. 2007. ISBN 978-1-4000-6351-2. Expanded 2nd ed, 2010 ISBN 978-0812973815.
- The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms. New York: Random House. 2010. ISBN 978-1-4000-6997-2. Expanded 2nd ed, 2016 ISBN 978-0812982404.
- Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder. New York: Random House. 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6782-4.
- Skin in the Game: Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life. New York: Random House. 2018. ISBN 978-0-4252-8462-9. (This book was not published with the original bundling of the Incerto series.)
Technical Incerto
- Statistical Consequences of Fat Tails: Real World Preasymptotics, Epistemology, and Applications (Technical Incerto Vol. 1). STEM Academic Press. 2020. ISBN 978-1-5445-0805-4.
Other
- Dynamic Hedging: Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 1997. ISBN 978-0-471-15280-4.
- Taleb, Nassim Nicholas; Cirillo, Pasquale (2018). The Logic and Statistics of Fat Tails. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-1419-8836-8.
Selection of papers
- Taleb, N. N., & West, J. (2023). Working with convex responses: Antifragility from finance to oncology. Entropy, 25(2), 343.
- Cirillo, P.; Taleb, N. N. (2020). "Tail risk of contagious diseases". Nature Physics. 16 (6): 606–613. arXiv:2004.08658. Bibcode:2020NatPh..16..606C. doi:10.1038/s41567-020-0921-x. S2CID 215828381.
- Taleb, N.N.; Norman, J.; Bar-Yam, Y; (26 January 2020) "Systemic Risk of Pandemic via Novel Pathogens – Coronavirus: A Note". Academia.edu. Systemic Risk of Pandemic via Novel Pathogens – Coronavirus: A Note
- Taleb, N. N. (2019). Medicine and Risk Transfer. Foresight: The International Journal of Applied Forecasting, (53), 31-32.
- Taleb, N. N.; Douady, R. (2013). "Mathematical definition, mapping, and detection of (anti)fragility". Quantitative Finance. 13 (11): 1677–1689. arXiv:1208.1189. doi:10.1080/14697688.2013.800219. S2CID 219716527.
- Taleb, N. N. (2015). "Unique Option Pricing Measure with neither Dynamic Hedging nor Complete Markets". European Financial Management. 21 (2): 228–235. doi:10.1111/eufm.12055. S2CID 153841924.
- Geman, D.; Geman, H.; Taleb, N. N. (2015). "Tail Risk Constraints and Maximum Entropy". Entropy. 17 (6): 1–14. arXiv:1412.7647. Bibcode:2015Entrp..17.3724G. doi:10.3390/e17063724. S2CID 2273464.
- Taleb, N. N.; Douady, R. (2015). "On the Super-Additivity and Estimation Biases of Quantile Contributions". Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications. 429: 252–260. arXiv:1405.1791. Bibcode:2015PhyA..429..252T. doi:10.1016/j.physa.2015.02.038. S2CID 23527680.
- Cirillo, P.; Taleb, N. N. (2016). "On the tail risk of violent conflict and its underestimation". Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications. 452: 29–45. arXiv:1505.04722. Bibcode:2016PhyA..452...29C. doi:10.1016/j.physa.2016.01.050. S2CID 9716627.
- Taleb, N. N. (2018). "Election predictions as martingales: an arbitrage approach". Quantitative Finance. 452 (1): 1–5. arXiv:1703.06351. doi:10.1080/14697688.2017.1395230. S2CID 158466482.
- Taleb, N. N. (2018). "How much data do you need? An operational, pre-asymptotic metric for fat-tailedness". International Journal of Forecasting. 35 (2): 677–686. arXiv:1802.05495. doi:10.1016/j.ijforecast.2018.10.003. S2CID 139102471.
See also
Notes
References
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a statistician, trader, and author, has argued for years that. ...
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Not only did Taleb have an explanation for the crisis, but he saw it coming
- ^ Kahneman, Daniel (2008). "How Could You Not Include ..." Foreign Policy. Archived from the original on 29 March 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ^ a b Nassim Nicholas Taleb, 2012, Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder, Random House (ISBN 0679645276) and Penguin Books (ISBN 0718197909), accessed 7 May 2015.
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- ^ Nassim Nicholas Taleb, 2007, "Opinion: The pseudo-science hurting markets," at Financial Times (online), 23 October 2007, see [3] and [4], accessed 7 May 2014.
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- ^ Taleb, N. N. (2009). Errors, robustness, and the fourth quadrant. International Journal of Forecasting, 25(4), 744–59
- ^ Taleb, The Black Swan, pg 207
- ^ Geman, D.; Geman, H.; Taleb, N. N. (2015). "Tail risk constraints and maximum entropy". Entropy. 17 (6): 3724. arXiv:1412.7647. Bibcode:2015Entrp..17.3724G. doi:10.3390/e17063724. S2CID 2273464.
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- ^ Taleb, Nassim Nicholas (2013). "What We Learn From Firefighters". Edge Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
Simply, one observation in 10,000, that is, one day in 40 years, can explain the bulk of the "kurtosis", a measure of what we call "fat tails", that is, how much the distribution under consideration departs from the standard Gaussian, or the role of remote events in determining the total properties. For the U.S. stock market, a single day, the crash of 1987, determined 80% of the kurtosis. The same problem is found with interest and exchange rates, commodities, and other variables. The problem is not just that the data had "fat tails", something people knew but sort of wanted to forget; it was that we would never be able to determine "how fat" the tails were. Never. The implication is that those tools used in economics that are based on squaring variables (more technically, the Euclidean, or L2 norm), such as standard deviation, variance, correlation, regression, or value-at-risk, the kind of stuff you find in textbooks, are not valid scientifically (except in some rare cases where the variable is bounded). The so-called "p values" you find in studies have no meaning with economic and financial variables. Even the more sophisticated techniques of stochastic calculus used in mathematical finance do not work in economics except in selected pockets.
- ^ Lund, Robert (2007). "Revenge of the white swan". American Statistician. 61 (4): 189–92. doi:10.1198/000313007X219374. S2CID 122874205.
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- ^ "Option traders use (very) sophisticated heuristics, never the Black–Scholes–Merton formula" (PDF). Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization.
- ^ "Author Nassim Taleb examines rare events, risk management and his book, "The Black Swan"". Charlie Rose. Charlie Rose. Retrieved 21 December 2016.
When my book came out, I started listening to the criticism, and I realized that nobody attacked my central point. I thought that someone would come up with some convincing argument. Two, three months after the publication, I went for the jugular. I said, this thing is going to go. And, in fact – so.
- ^ "Overheard". The Wall Street Journal. 14 February 2009.
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- ^ "GDI – Think Tank". Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute.
- ^ "Nassim Taleb: Commencement Address 2016" (PDF). American University of Beirut. 27 May 2016. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
External links
- Nassim Taleb's home page
- Nassim Nicholas Taleb at IMDb
- Nassim Nicholas Taleb publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Self-contradictory articles from May 2015
- Nassim Nicholas Taleb
- 1960 births
- Living people
- 20th-century Eastern Orthodox Christians
- 21st-century American essayists
- 21st-century American male writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American philosophers
- 21st-century Eastern Orthodox Christians
- American male non-fiction writers
- Aphorists
- Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences faculty
- Critics of political economy
- Epistemologists
- Greek Orthodox Christians from Lebanon
- Greek Orthodox Christians from the United States
- Members of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch
- Lebanese Christians
- Lebanese emigrants to the United States
- Lebanese philosophers
- Monte Carlo methodologists
- New England Complex Systems Institute
- Paris Dauphine University alumni
- People from Koura District
- Polytechnic Institute of New York University faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty
- University of Paris alumni
- Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania alumni
- Mathematical statisticians