| I don't bother with his pop books and I read his tweets for amusement (and hard calculus problems). His papers and technical write-ups are worth something. Like I'm sure if he had an editor they would hate his latest book- it's god awfully written- but the mathematics is good I swear. I've studied a couple of his references. https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.10488 I don't think his fund is structured to beat the market. If his fund is structured for extraordinary events then I would expect it to underperform strategies that are optimized for typical conditions. I would expect his fund to be used as a hedge in a more diversified strategy and IIRC there was publicity that it did exactly what it was intended to do for its clients when COVID-19 became a pandemic. > your lizard brain is designed to handle futures on the order of seconds and minutes, not months and years, and certainly not decades and centuries. I guess I should eat my words for using an imprecise phrase like lizard brain but I'm talking about the limbic system which is most assuredly involved in decisions involving fear and ignorance and long term behavior, not snap decisions. Fear in ignorance is good if the possibility space you're ignorant of contains catastrophic consequences. If you have to make a decision that is beyond your intellectual capacity, you should be cautious. We evolved from very stupid creatures that needed to survive phenomena they did not understand. We have not transcended that need. Rationality is also knowing the limits of your rationality. > the appropriate reaction to an unpredictable event is no reaction at all, since by definition, you can't predict what it is, much less when it will happen. I'm sorry but this is collective suicide in the face of a pandemic. In the face of an exponentially self-propagating phenomenon that has a wide possibility of effects including: death, permanent injury and the collapse of the healthcare system, waiting around to get more information just means it would be too late if action was needed. Even if it turns out we could have gotten away without it this time, that doesn't mean we overreacted. > edit: also, fat-tailed typically means a tiny bit fatter than a guassian tail, not some wavy, unknownably fat "tail". otherwise, we'd have enough known events from which to draw reasonable predictions, making it not extreme and unpredictable, nor even a tail at all. Is this a philosophical point? Are you saying that if I cannot draw enough samples to approximate it that the population distribution doesn't exist? I'm arguing that there are limits to empirical methods in the face of extraordinary events and I'm making that claim somewhat more concrete by appealing to the divergence in behavior between the population and sample statistics of heavy-tailed, e.g. something with power law decaying tails like a pareto distribution. Is it ridiculous to conclude that in the face of extraordinary events that cannot be reasonably predicted empirically whose outcomes would be A) widespread, basically affecting everyone and B) potentially catastrophic, we have to be cautious? I don't see how. |
> "Fear in ignorance is good if the possibility space you're ignorant of contains catastrophic consequences."
sure, a fear of the unknown is baked into the limbic system, but herein is the crux of our disagreement: what fear is and is not, what's catastrophic and what's not, and the magnitude of "contains" relative to preparation and response.
fear is a cascading physiological process that triggers our fight-or-flight response (lizard brain), causing physical and emotional degradation, and shutting down our rational brains. fear retards our ability to think and act appropriately. unless the threat is something imminently immediate, like an oncoming car, fear can easily overwhelm our response with misjudgment (hoarding, for example).
concern and caution--cousins of fear--are frontal, intellectual processes built atop the limbic. these, along with diversity of thought and appropriate communication, can lead to reasonable responses to non-imminent threats. this is what we should lean into, not fear.
the mistake with covid (and 9/11, etc.) is not recognizing the difference.
covid is trending toward 5% of yearly US deaths. certainly concerning and worthy of serious response, but not civilization destroying. that's the right context to couch our reactions.