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El cisne negro : el impacto de lo altamente improbable
El cisne negro : el impacto de lo altamente improbable | Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Qu es un cisne negro? Para empezar, es un suceso improbable, sus consecuencias son importantes y todas las explicaciones que se puedan ofrecer a posteriori no tienen en cuenta el azar y slo buscan encajar lo imprevisible en un modelo perfecto. El xito de Google y You Tube, y hasta ell 11-S, son cisnes negros. Para Nassim Nicholas Taleb, los cisnes negros son parte integrante de nuestro mundo, desde el auge de las religiones hasta los acontecimientos de nuestra vida personal. Por qu no podemos identificar este fenmeno hasta que ya ha sucedido? Segn el autor, ello se debe a que los humanos nos empeamos en investigar las cosas ya sabidas, olvidndonos de lo que desconocemos. Ello nos impide reconocer las oportunidades y nos hace demasiado vulnerables al impulso de simplificar, narrar y categorizar, olvidndonos de recompensar a quienes saben imaginar lo imposible. Elegante, sorprendente, y con reflexiones de alcance universal, El cisne negro transformar nuestra manera de mirar el mundo. Taleb es un escritor ameno, ingenioso e irreverente, con un profundo conocimiento de temas tan dispares como la ciencia cognitiva, el mundo de los negocios y la teora de la probabilidad. De hecho, El cisne negro es autntico cisne negro en s mismo.
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DcSunshine
Mehso-so

I liked it but it‘s dense and difficult. In some ways it felt it had one really good point and was dragging it out. That idea, however, is fascinating. I told everyone I was reading this book simply to try and have someone to discuss it with - it would have enhanced this experience

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Eggs
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 🖤📚🤍 3y
64 likes1 comment
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janeycanuck
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Mehso-so

While this was much more accessible than I expected, it wasn‘t quite what I wanted. It was a lot of succinct information about a lot of topics, I was looking for more depth on some of the black swan events and the fallout from them. Penny also seems to feel it wasn‘t quite worth her attention.

Book 9 for #15books15weeks

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violetmoon
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Thndrstd
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I‘m sure many of you have already seen this but this seems like the perfect place to put this multiple times:

The value of owning more books than you can read: https://bigthink.com/personal-growth/do-i-own-too-many-books

Crazeedi Great photo of awesome looking books! I'd love to browse!❤️ 4y
Thndrstd @Crazeedi thanks. I wish I could take credit but it‘s from the article 4y
38 likes1 stack add2 comments
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RainerT
Mehso-so

Fascinating intellectual journey (bit yet finished). However what are the consequences for our daily living?

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RamsFan1963
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Bailedbailed

I was interested in the subject matter, but Taleb's writing style turned me off almost from page one. If you're interested in probability, luck and the power of randomness, I'd recommend The Drunkard's Walk by Leonard Mlodinow. It's more entertaining and easier to understand.

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Whodunit85
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The positivity we all need in our lives today. Especially with that B&N sale still happening.

https://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/why-you-should-stop-feeling-bad-about-all-t...

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks ❤️❤️❤️ 6y
Augustdana I am literally surrounded by my books because I decided today would be a good day to try and organize my shelves. This is just the kind of motivation I need 🙃🙃🙃 6y
104 likes2 comments
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Eggs
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Thestar1685 Is that book on Freud and Jung any good? I‘m trying to get a good list of psychology books. Ty 6y
Eggs Yes. I believe both Jung and Adler were followers of Freud, then authored their own theories. Been a while since I studied them 6y
90 likes2 comments
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Jgotham
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Yassss 👇🏽

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Jgotham
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I wasn‘t impressed with my last library book so today I‘m starting with “The Black Swan” to help get me out of my work slump

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silentrequiem
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This seemed of interest to many of my fellow book-hoarding Littens!

https://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/why-you-should-stop-feeling-bad-about-all-t...

Purrfectpages That‘s me! 6y
mrozzz Hehe I like this.... 6y
silentrequiem @mrozzz I'm using this as an excuse to buy more books. 😁 6y
mjdowens Need to send this article to my husband! 6y
30 likes4 comments
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taning
Pickpick

Great read, good to think differently and not just follow the crowd

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TindraTieren
Pickpick

I came to this book after it being mentioned in a conference talk. I am quite glad I did. Like, I should probably grab a print version to better use as reference and mark up and stuff, because referencing audiobooks sucks.

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GoneFishing

I disagree with the followers of Marx and those of Adam Smith: the reason free markets work is because they allow people to be lucky, thanks to aggressive trial and error, not by giving rewards or "incentives" for skill.

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LauraJ
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This is the only book that I #DNF for my book club in over five years. I got so tired of the author going off on tangents about himself. #readjanuary

45 likes1 stack add
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anushareflects
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This intriguing piece was recommended to me during a seminar on managing risk. Immensely curious to read more! TBR.

5 likes2 stack adds