Fan cui ruo

cong bu que ding xing zhong huo yi

370 pages

Chinese language

Published Aug. 13, 2014 by Citic Press.

ISBN:
978-7-5086-4333-5
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OCLC Number:
873986745

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3 stars (51 reviews)

"The acclaimed author of the influential bestseller The Black Swan, Nicholas Nassim Taleb takes a next big step with a deceptively simple concept: the "antifragile." Like the Greek hydra that grows two heads for each one it loses, people, systems, and institutions that are antifragile not only withstand shocks, they benefit from them. In a modern world dominated by chaos and uncertainty, Antifragile is a revolutionary vision from one of the most subversive and important thinkers of our time. Praise for Nicholas Nassim Taleb "[This] is the lesson of Taleb. and also the lesson of our volatile times. There is more courage and heroism in defying the human impulse, in taking the purposeful and painful steps to prepare for the unimaginable."--Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point "[Taleb writes] in a style that owes as much to Stephen Colbert as it does to Michel de Montaigne."--The Wall Street Journal "The …

11 editions

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

It's a book whose central idea is very clear and, I found, very interesting. It then grows as a tree to develop this idea into intricate branches, all very connected to the root though. The central idea rotates around the concept of antifragility (of course, you saw the title) which is the ability of certain systems to thrive from attacks and get strengthened by them, rather than be victims of it. The book gives plenty of examples and sometimes goes deep into history. A good and recommended read, I only found the (many) parts where the author criticises personalities, institutions, other ideas, a bit excessively bitter.

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

Taleb’s disdain for those scientific methods which have proven his personal experience to be at odds with the evidence of human growth over the past century or more, means I’m no longer going to waste my time with the rest of his tedious, repetitive, defensive tome.

No doubt he’d probably compose a 40 page essay in reaction to my review if I was some famous academic who he appears to have the most disregard for – Something which libertarians who hoover this nonsense up would probably also fawn over.

And as long as they do, lazy publishers who celebrate sales over rational thought will continue to bring their self-centred brainfarts into print.

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'GoodReads'

No rating

Талеб — третью книгу насилующий небольшой набор (довольно разумных, здесь без возражений) тезисов путающийся в собственной логике шарлатан. Для улучшения опыта рекомендую выпивать каждый раз, когда он использует для подкрепления очередного своего наблюдения умозаключения, опирающиеся на ранее описанные им же типичные логические ошибки. Hard mode: почитать хотя бы, скажем, Голдакра про фармакологию перед тем, как взяться за соответствующую главу Antifragile, чтобы примерно оценить, насклько Талеб охотно рассуждает о вещах, о которых не имеет даже поверхностного представления (будут и другие возможности).

Как шарлатан Талеб, впрочем, хорош: мало кто способен с таким напором внушать клиенту чувство собственной исключительной сообразительности и незамутнённости. С нужной интонацией нашептанное на ухо "мы-то с тобой, читатель, не такие" — мощнейший инструмент, каждому хочется видеть насквозь некомпетентность учёных и экономистов. Талеб не отказывает себе и в удовольствии перечислить, кажется, все случаи, когда он (вероятней всего, по случайности) оказывался в чём-то прав, а эксперты в области — не слишком. …

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Best idea in this book: consider the downside as well as the upside, and systemic perverse incentives can largely be corrected by ensuring decision-makers have skin in the game. For these ideas, read Taleb's other book called "Skin in the Game" and throw this one in the trash.

Every real-world example he gives of something "anti-fragile" could be considered simply "resilient," so I doubt that it exists outside of mythology, like his example of the Hydra, which grows 2 new heads for each decapitation it experiences.

Long discussion on how nonlinear systems are anti-fragile, but it's more descriptive than definitive. He deplores his favorite straw men "Soviet Harvard Academics" for not understanding these systems with curves. (They do; they formulated them.)

On the one hand, academics are all ivory tower fools who don't understand his real-world economics papers like all these business people seem too, and on the other hand, …

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Awesome book. It alleviated some of my scariest anxieties.

Future anxiety. Before I read it I thought I would miss something new if I’m not going to read about new shiny things every day. Turns out, new developments are not that important. People cannot solve the same problems for centuries, so it’s better to read classics to anticipate future.

Health anxiety. Health is complex. Doctors don’t know much about it and almost always create problems on the long run. Well known example is antibiotics. Also when you think you’re so tired you gonna die you’re not even close to dying. It boosted my productivity.

Before the book I wasn’t sure why I don’t like government, education system and media. Turns out they’re ruled by fragilistas. That’s why those institutions produce so much bullshit.

The book made me realize that life gets much easier and better when you deliberately remove stuff …

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I found this really hard to read. The author is so dismissive of others, and just plain insulting without a huge amount to back it up. Yet, because I found him so hateful, I felt the need to persist in reading.

At one point he defends the imperial system vs the metric system

He talks about how all increased life expectancy can be attributed to decline in smoking, implying that medical science is maybe not living up to it's goals. Yet ignores the quality of life improvements we've seen from medical science.

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

At first I wasn't sure what to make of this book, but I suppose that's understandable, what with me not having read Taleb's previous work, that is, Fooled by Randomness and The Black Swan. Eventually, I came to be convinced that this book is, without a doubt, one of the most brilliant, most intelligent analyses of our economic society, of risk, personal as well as systemic, that I've read in a long, long time.

To be fair, I do not understand the full implication of the message, of what fragility vs antifragility entails, and I will be reading this book again soon, because --- there is so much to gain by understanding the principle.

Basically, there exists in the world today, those things that suffer from stress and damage, which Taleb calls "fragile": you drop a glass, it breaks; mechanics in general. And then there exists other things, those that …

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I could not point to a worse book that I have read.

The author is disorganized and throws a bunch of random factoids together with an unconvincing unifying theme. The lack of clarity in thinking is reminiscent of the kind of pseudo-intellectual numerology or fact-correlating that you find in works of fiction, but it is made even worse by the fact that the author seems to have a long list of axes to grind, and fills the book with petty name calling. Why is he so obsessed with the "soviet-harvard complex"?

I have the impression that good reviews of this book must come from people who felt they were supposed to "get it", but I think there is nothing to "get" in the book, starting from the introduction of a new word "antifragile", an awkward word to describe as a single phenomenon something that remains unconvincing.

As a saving grace: …

Review of 'Anti-Fragile' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Antifragility is a hard to follow and perhaps harder to like.

Antifragile takes the idea of optionality from finance and broadens it out into a universal quantity.
From engineering to medicine, to career development to politics, Taleb sees optionality everywhere.
Can't say, I agrred on everyhing but the idea and the philosophy behind it, is definately intriguing.

Review of 'Antifragile' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This book must be read with a grain of salt, as Mr. Taleb can be ornery and cantankerous. However, I find his concepts compelling, even if his delivery can be questionable at times. I find his comments on education to be most off-base, while his comments on medicine and health care to be spot on. I especially resonate with his idea of "skin in the game" as necessary for achieving some semblance of equity, and I also liked his ideas on variability in diet as healthy. I'd like to go back through this book and examine it in more depth at some point.

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Subjects

  • Social aspects
  • Uncertainty (Information theory)
  • Forecasting
  • Complexity (Philosophy)