menaceh2k
Member
I am afraid that this post will expose the limits of my intelligence but I have to do it none the less. I've read Nassim nochola's Black Swan:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_swan_theory
and I do not understand anything beyond there are things that are difficult-impossible to predict because we are accustomed to perceiving certain things a certain way. And my favorite part...you cant do a damn thing about it...
I mean i read the book front to back, and I liked it. But I did not get anything more out of it than what i posted above. Maybe its because i got a shameful B- in statistics. I know I know. As far as I'm concerned statistics is not real MATH. Its bullshit. Its dirty nasty and unordered. Ewwwwwww. So anyways, did he write a million page book just to repeat the same thing over and over again. Or I'm I missing something? Is my hatred for dirty statistics (the math of charlatans) blinding me to the answers.
Is it even a theory. It reminds me of the whole notion of "there are known knowns and unknown unknowns." which is also bullshit. and "unknown unknown" is just an unknown. yet i digress. please help me get out of this stupid mental loop and clarify this for me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_swan_theory
The Black Swan Theory or "Theory of Black Swan Events" was developed by Nassim Nicholas Taleb to explain: 1) the disproportionate role of high-impact, hard to predict, and rare events that are beyond the realm of normal expectations in history, science, finance and technology, 2) the non-computability of the probability of the consequential rare events using scientific methods (owing to their very nature of small probabilities) and 3) the psychological biases that make people individually and collectively blind to uncertainty and unaware of the massive role of the rare event in historical affairs. Unlike the earlier philosophical "black swan problem", the "Black Swan Theory" (capitalized) refers only to unexpected events of large magnitude and consequence and their dominant role in history. Such events, considered extreme outliers, collectively play vastly larger roles than regular occurrences.
and I do not understand anything beyond there are things that are difficult-impossible to predict because we are accustomed to perceiving certain things a certain way. And my favorite part...you cant do a damn thing about it...
I mean i read the book front to back, and I liked it. But I did not get anything more out of it than what i posted above. Maybe its because i got a shameful B- in statistics. I know I know. As far as I'm concerned statistics is not real MATH. Its bullshit. Its dirty nasty and unordered. Ewwwwwww. So anyways, did he write a million page book just to repeat the same thing over and over again. Or I'm I missing something? Is my hatred for dirty statistics (the math of charlatans) blinding me to the answers.
Is it even a theory. It reminds me of the whole notion of "there are known knowns and unknown unknowns." which is also bullshit. and "unknown unknown" is just an unknown. yet i digress. please help me get out of this stupid mental loop and clarify this for me.