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Open The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable
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The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable

Nassim Nicholas Taleb

53 pages111 min

The book explores the concept of the Black Swan—unpredictable, high-impact events that are retrospectively rationalized. It critiques humanity's blindness to these rare occurrences, especially the reliance on flawed Gaussian models that ignore extreme deviations. The author advocates for "epistemic humility," shifting from prediction to preparedness, and adopting a "barbell strategy" to limit vulnerability to negative Black Swans while maximizing exposure to positive ones. He highlights cognitive biases like the narrative fallacy and confirmation bias, and exposes the "ludic fallacy" of applying sterilized game-like risks to complex real-world uncertainty, particularly in financial systems, arguing for a society robust to error rather than one built on false predictability.