Greetings, all --

It was nice to be in Santa Fe again, albeit briefly. Eric Falkenstein is not a 
lover of Taleb, and so I'll pass this along with that proviso and note that 
it's helpful to think through some of both Taleb's statements and Falkenstein's 
reactions:

http://falkenblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/fooled-by-randomness.html

Here is an earlier posting by Falkenstein that may give you some of the flavor 
of his feelings for Taleb:

Martin Gardner wrote a popular column for Scientific American, and in
the process received a lot of mail from ‘cranks’ telling him about
perpetual motion machines and the like. So he wrote a book called Fads and 
Fallacies.  In the book he describes "cranks" who he describes as having five 
invariable characteristics:



A profound intellectual superiority complex.

Regards other researchers as idiotic, and always operates outside the peer 
review system.

Believes there is a campaign against their ideas, a campaign compared with the 
persecution of Galileo or Pasteur.

Attacks only the biggest theories and scientific figures.

Coins neologisms.



On Taleb’s personal website he describes himself thusly: He is also an 
essayist, belletrist, literary-philosophical-mathematical flâneur.
The third-person is perfect pitch for describing himself, and the rest,
well, literary-philosophical-mathematical types—especially flâneurs—tend
to be full of themselves, supporting Gardner’s characteristic #1. He
prides himself on not submitting articles to refereed journals, and
conside
rs most people who are indifferent to him as fools, disdains
editors, even spellcheckers (#2). He pridefully notes that someone told
him “in another time he would have been hanged [me: for what,
inanity?].” Wilmott Magazine, a quant publication published by his colleague 
Paul Wilmott, wrote a fawning article about
him where they noted that he is “Wall Street’s principal dissident.
Heretic! Calvin to finance’s Catholic Church” (#3). His website states
his modest desire to understand chance from the viewpoint of
“philosophy/epistemology, philosophy/ethics, mathematics, social
science/finance, and cognitive science”, supporting #4. Lastly, for #5,
has gone so far as to print a glossary for his neologisms (eg, “epistemic 
arrogance” for “overconfidence”).  In Martin Gardner’s taxonomy, Taleb is a 
classic crank.

(end of excerpt - via Mahalanobis 20 April 2007)

- Claiborne -

 


 

-----Original Message-----
From: Phil Henshaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group' <friam@redfish.com>
Sent: Sun, 16 Nov 2008 7:42 am
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] The Black Swan










I'd agree Taleb does not communicate his main insights consistently, and
uses fuzzy generalities that you need to "grok" to make sense of.  I don't
think one needs to deal with all that to get the main point, though.

The reasons why *statistical analysis fails for subjects of increasing
non-homogenous complexity* seems invaluable.   It's a principl
e that might
be derived simply from any number of directions, and is an important point.
Our world is making the critical error exposed in any number of ways it
appears.   

It's also interestingly central to the complexity theory of W M Elsasser
that he developed in the 50's and 60's.  He's an extraordinarily clear
thinking theoretical physicist/biologist who points to that as a gap in
statistical mechanics that needs to be considered for any attempt to model
non-homogenous systems like life.   

I even find that "strategy of the gaps" remotely similar to how Rosen points
to why divergent sequences can't be represented in closed systems of
equations, but are clearly part of life, and so are necessary for any
attempt to model such non-homogenously developing and changing systems as
life.

Phil Henshaw  

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Jochen Fromm
> Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 4:59 AM
> To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
> Subject: [FRIAM] The Black Swan
> 
> I am currently trying to read Taleb's "Black Swan".
> Paul and Glen mentioned it earlier a few weeks ago,
> and Russ said it has some nice points. So I read
> the first chapter and thought "well, interesting".
> Then I read the second about Yevgenia Krasnova,
> a fictional character which embodies his anger
> about publishers, and thought "what a crap".
> 
> Somehow it goes on like this: it is hard to
> say if it is crap20(his "Mediocristan" and
> "Extremistan" for example) or a masterpiece.
> Chapter three is better again. Many ideas
> are exhilarating, but the terms are often
> very idiosyncratic.
> 
> His main topic, the "Black Swan", is less
> interesting than the many thought provoking
> ideas one can find between the lines, when Taleb
> talks about his experiences or uprising. After
> all, points where little things can make a big
> difference are not new, John H. Holland has
> called them "Lever points", Murray Gell-Mann
> "frozen accidents", and Gladwell "tipping points".
> 
> Do you agree? What do you think are his most
> interesting points? I like for instance the
> paragraphs about "scalable professions":
> for Taleb it is "a profession in which you are
> not paid by the hour and thus subject to the
> limitations of the amount of labor" (p. 27).
> It is in interesting idea to apply "scalability"
> to professions and payoffs.
> 
> -J.
> 
> 
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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