Tomorrow morning starts the grueling Orthodox lent…

Tomorrow morning starts the grueling Orthodox lent. No animal product for 40 days. Note that both Ancient Greeks and Levantine Semites never ate meat without some kind of sacrifice to the God(s), something that persists in Kosher-Halal rituals. Meat was limited to festivals (“carnival”).

I initially thought that the intermittent protein deprivation followed by overcompensation was meant to draw benefits from Jensen’s inequality/antifragility (whether the process is kidney-rest, anti-inflammatory or authophagy for cancer control/hormonal as held by Valter Longo, it doesn’t matter because we know the statistical structure of natural life gave hunters intermittent meat and steady vegetables and we are not supposed to have steady red meat).

But it can’t be just that. It just hit me that I missed a central point. This relief was also to help … THE ANIMALS, the ecology. Animals too need a break from milk/egg production, etc. And because of nonlinearity their population may need some kind of natural surge (hint: look at Lotka-Volterra predator-prey models).

via Tomorrow morning starts the grueling Orthodox… – Nassim Nicholas Taleb.

Academics find it “irrational” that one can prefer apples to oranges…

Academics find it “irrational” that one can prefer apples to oranges, oranges to pears, but pears to apples (something called intransitivity of preferences). I leave aside the problem that in real life choices have synchronies: I am not (dynamically) inconsistent if I prefer soup to grapes at the beginning of dinner, but grapes to soup at the end. Things never presents themselves to us in a textbook way, but over time and in different contexts. But there there is a deeper logic for such inconsistency –even in the *static* case.

Recall that the antifragile is what likes a bit of randomness.

It may be very efficient, in the long run, to inject some randomness in one’s choices in order to span a broader set of objects, and intransitivity is one way to do so. Break the routine of choices. This is similar to gift giving: a gift is something that you would not buy otherwise; it too breaks your routine of choices — like a book you would have never thought of buying.

Mother nature may have a way to force you to make “mistakes” of small consequence may reveal deeper preferences or more interesting attributes of the world. This is optionality.

via Academics find it “irrational” that one can… – Nassim Nicholas Taleb.

How a Black Swan event can take place without anyone noticing…

How a Black Swan event can take place without anyone noticing: error propagation and dimensionality.

 

via Nassim NicholنTaleb on Twitter: “How a Black Swan event can take place without anyone noticing: error propagation and dimensionality. https://t.co/6sjxQI8EHG”.

This is a critical 1 min lecture to understand independence, antifragility, “f** you money”

This is a critical 1 min lecture to understand independence, antifragility, “f** you money”, selfownership, and many things.

(This came 8 years after the f*** you money idea was formulated in The Black Swan, except that it missed the critical later development as Fat Tony explained that ” f*** you” is not financial, but a state of mind, people on minimum wage are more likely to have it.)

(Thanks G. Panterov)


via This is a critical 1 min lecture to understand… – Nassim Nicholas Taleb.