Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Lebanese scientist Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
Last updated on October 10, 2024.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb is a Lebanese-American essayist, mathematical statistician, former option trader, risk analyst, and aphorist whose work concerns problems of randomness, probability, and uncertainty. The Sunday Times called his 2007 book The Black Swan one of the 12 most influential books since World War II.
I lift heavy weights and sprint, but I am so bad at it that I develop severe injuries.
Poverty is clearly one source of emotional suffering, but there are others, like loneliness.
I select a very small number of things to be sceptical about, such as markets, and on these I am hypersceptic. But I want to be fooled by randomness in art. I want the ceremonial of religion; we are made for it.
The world we live in is vastly different from the world we think we live in.
The next time you experience a blackout, take some solace by looking at the sky. You will not recognize it.
Never think that lack of variability is stability. Don't confuse lack of volatility with stability, ever.
Capitalism has forced everyone to overoptimize in order to compete.
If you take risks and face your fate with dignity, there is nothing you can do that makes you small; if you don't take risks, there is nothing you can do that makes you grand, nothing.
Banking is a very treacherous business because you don't realize it is risky until it is too late. It is like calm waters that deliver huge storms.
All of technology, really, is about maximizing free options.
I drive a hybrid, moving into an electric car. I only drink tap water, never consume food that's travelled.
Alan Greenspan is unskilled; you don't take the unskilled seriously.
I don't read the papers; I stopped reading the papers. I read the papers only during periods of crisis, and I think papers are too long on a regular day and too short days when we have a crisis.
If I ask you to write down the last 4 digits of your social security number, and then take you out to lunch and ask you how many dentists there are in Manhattan, there's going to be a high correlation between those two numbers. What happens is that the number psychologically makes you feel confident.
The mortgage crisis is a clear instance of consumers who needed protection. There was predatory lending to people who didn't know what they were doing.
What we do today has nothing to do with capitalism or socialism. It is a crony type of system that transfers money to the coffers of bureaucrats.
What America does best is produce the ability to accept failure.
I am happy everywhere except in places where I see glitz and rich farts. I am happiest in Brooklyn, where the concentration of rich farts is minimal.
I hated school because I liked to daydream and the system tried to stop me from that.
Economics make homeopath and alternative healers look empirical and scientific.
Writing is sacred, other activities are profane, and I don't want them to corrupt my writing.
The American people will eventually get hurt by this accumulated deficit. That's the problem. We have too much deficit. We have to find a solution.
Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg didn't finish college. Too much emphasis is placed on formal education - I told my children not to worry about their grades but to enjoy learning.
I'm in favour of religion as a tamer of arrogance. For a Greek Orthodox, the idea of God as creator outside the human is not God in God's terms. My God isn't the God of George Bush.
I'm a capitalist but one who is smallist and localist, and who favours businesses where owners are still in charge.
Never take advice from anyone in a tie. They'll bankrupt you. Don't ask a general for advice on war, and don't ask a broker for advice on money.
Debt is a mistake between lender and borrower, and both should suffer.
We know from chaos theory that even if you had a perfect model of the world, you'd need infinite precision in order to predict future events. With sociopolitical or economic phenomena, we don't have anything like that.
People have the problem of denial. This is one of the things I learned in Lebanon. Everybody who left Beirut when the war started, including my parents, said, 'Oh, its temporary.' It lasted 17 years! People tend to underestimate the gravity of these situations. That's how they work.
We are victims of the post-Enlightenment view that the world functions like a sophisticated machine, to be understood like a textbook engineering problem and run by wonks. In other words, like a home appliance, not like the human body.
The track record of economists in predicting events is monstrously bad. It is beyond simplification; it is like medieval medicine.
Globalization has created this interlocking fragility. At no time in the history of the universe has the cancellation of a Christmas order in New York meant layoffs in China.
Most people are sceptical about the wrong things and gullible about the wrong things.
When you ask people, 'What's the opposite of fragile?,' they tend to say robust, resilient, adaptable, solid, strong. That's not it. The opposite of fragile is something that gains from disorder.
Years ago, I noticed one thing about economics, and that is that economists didn't get anything right.
You know, children philosophize more than adults - and they are critical of adults.
The people I go after are the false experts, those who do not accept the limits of their knowledge.
Paul Krugman is a danger to society!
Being an economist is the least ethical profession, closer to charlatanism than any science.
Individuals should think about the worst-case scenarios and plan for them. The world will be crazier than you think it will be. Put money away, and then you can live with much more freedom.
We should ban banks from risk-taking because society is going to pay the price.
In social policy, when we provide a safety net, it should be designed to help people take more entrepreneurial risks, not to turn them into dependents. This doesn't mean that we should be callous to the underprivileged.
The key to wealth is that it doesn't matter. Once you've had it, you don't think anything of it; you can wear cheap watches.
There are two types of people: those who try to win and those who try to win arguments. They are never the same.
Failure saves lives. In the airline industry, every time a plane crashes the probability of the next crash is lowered by that. The Titanic saved lives because we're building bigger and bigger ships. So these people died, but we have effectively improved the safety of the system, and nothing failed in vain.
It might be useful to be able to predict war. But tension does not necessarily lead to war, but often to peace and to denouement.
I don't know anyone on Wall Street who goes to work every day thinking of anything but how to increase their bonus.
The best philosophers were not academics, but had another job, so their philosophy was not corrupted by careerism.
I don't go to the doctor except when I'm very ill, and when I go to India, I drink a drop of local water.
Fragility is the quality of things that are vulnerable to volatility.
The Internet allows the small guy a global marketplace. But technology is harmful in the sense that we get too much information from it. Because of the web we get 10 times the amount of noise we ever got, which makes harmful fallacies far more likely.
You will get the most attention from those who hate you. No friend, no admirer and no partner will flatter you with as much curiosity.
When I trade, I don't have an agency problem; I have my neck on the line. When a bank or banker trades, it's not his neck on the line.
We have this culture of financialization. People think they need to make money with their savings rather with their own business. So you end up with dentists who are more traders than dentists. A dentist should drill teeth and use whatever he does in the stock market for entertainment.
A country's assets reside in the tinkerers, the hobbyists, and the risk-takers.
You are rich if and only if money you refuse tastes better than money you accept.
Success is about honour, feeling morally calibrated, absence of shame, not what some newspaper defines from an external metric.
We humans lack imagination, to the point of not even knowing what tomorrow's important things will look like.
Most so-called writers keep writing and writing with the hope, some day, to find something to say.
Deficits are like putting dynamite in the hands of children. They can get out of control very quickly.