1/ Story time!
One of my followers asked about stories that illustrate why you shouldn't listen to stories/narratives about why you shouldn't rely just on them to make investment decisions. Here are a few:
2/ Let begin with you walking up with a horrible pain in your stomach. You've had it for a week or more and are worried. It just so happens your doctor has an opening that afternoon, so you grab the appointment to see if it might be something serious.
3/ You get to your doctor and describe the pain and he says "You're in luck! I just a had a pharmaceutical rep in and he told me the about how great these new little pills are for stomach problems. He said all of his friends and family have tried them, and the worked every time"
4/ He adds "You should try them too!" Would you? Or would you prefer that your doctor examined you to rule out some serious problems, isolated the problem and then said: "Not to worry, I think I have the right medicine for this. It's been through 100 double-blind tests
5/ on a large and diverse group of patients, and it has worked in 80% of the people who took the medication?" I'm going to go with option B, the one that is designed to my specific problem and has a huge amount of empirical support as to its efficacy.
6/ I doubt many people would have confidence in a doctor who said he was going to "wing your treatment based on a great story he just heard," yet that's exactly what you're doing if you buy a stock because you just heard a great story about it. Results may very indeed.
7/ How about life insurance? Do you think a company that based their decisions on who to insure based on how well they liked the candidate? Imagine going in and the rep saying to you: "You're young, healthy, have no family history of cancer or hear disease, but I don't like
8/ your attitude. I'm not giving you any insurance." Sound smart? What if the next person was 50 pounds overweight, had several severe health problems, a family history of heart disease and no male member of their family lived past 50 but they gave him a $10 million
9/ life insurance policy because he was the nicest guy they ever met and had a great story about how he had found just the right mix of exercise and what foods to eat that would help all his health problems vanish? Great story maybe, but Life insurance companies
10/ rely heavily on actuarial tables that look at a huge sample of the population and how long they are estimated to live based upon health, whether they smoke, are overweight, family history, etc. to determine who are the best bets to give insurance to--hint, young and healthy
11/ usually get the lowest rates. An insurance company that based policies on stories and not empirical evidence wouldn't be able to make good on the insurance claim because they would have gone bankrupt pretty quickly.
12/ we have a love of stories written into our DNA--before writing, it was the only way for the tribe to know its traditions, what went before them and why they did things the way they did. But now, we must enjoy the story and ask for proof. Trust, but verify.
13/ And yes. There are all sorts of great stories to back up why you should look for evidence that the odds are in your favor before doing something. But that's for another day.
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As part of a project I was working on, I created a list of books that I thought would be worth re-reading and wondered if—despite addressing seemingly very different ideas—they shared any similar underlying themes.
Here's the list:
"Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values" by Robert M. Pirsig
"Tao Te Ching" by Lao Tzu
"Siddhartha" by Hermann Hesse
"Shantaram" by Gregory David Roberts
“The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature” by Steven Pinker
“Cleopatra: A Life” by Stacy Schiff
“Cloud Atlas: A Novel.” by David Mitchell
“The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet” by David Mitchell
“Foundation.” by Isaac Asimov (and all of its follow on books)
“The Dog Stars” by Peter Heller
“Paris in the Present Tense” by Mark Helprin
“Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman” by James Gleick
“Ghostwritten” by David Mitchell
“The Lessons of History” by Will and Ariel Durant
“Letters of Note” by Shaun Usher
“Money: A Suicide Note” by Martin Amis
“The Razor’s Edge.” by W. Somerset Maugham
“When Breath Becomes Air” by Paul Kalanithi
“Wolf Hall: A Novel” by Hilary Mantel
"Zorba the Greek" by Nikos Kazantzakis
"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" by Richard P. Feynman and Ralph Leighton
“A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age” by Jimmy Soni
“The Road” by Cormac McCarthy
“Rules for Old Men Waiting: A Novel” by Peter Pouncey
“The Screwtape Letters” By C.S. Lewis
"Twins: And What The Tell Us About Who We Are” by Lawrence Wright
“What do You Care What Other People Think?” by Richard P. Feynman
"The Glass Bead Game" by Hermann Hesse
"Man's Search for Meaning" by Viktor Frankl
"The Beginning of Infinity" by David Deutsch
"The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" by Thomas S. Kuhn
"Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid" by Douglas Hofstadter
"Meditations" by Marcus Aurelius
“Ubik” by Philip K. Dick
“VALIS” by Philip K. Dick
“Unflattening” by Nick Sousanis
"Alchemy: The Dark Art and Curious Science of Creating Magic in Brands, Business, and Life" by Rory Sutherland
"The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit" by Michael Finkel
"The Year of Magical Thinking" by Joan Didion
“All the Light we Cannot See” by Anthony Doerr
“Adventures of a Bystander” by Peter Drucker
"The Order of Time" by Carlo Rovelli
“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" by Jean-Dominique Bauby
“The Creative Act: A Way of Being” by Rick Rubin
“Reality Hunger: A Manifesto” by David Shields
“The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition into the Forces of History” by Howard Bloom
“Excellent Advice for Living: Wisdom I Wish’d I’d Know Earlier” by Kevin Kelly
“The Namesake” by Jhumpa Lahiri
“Atonement” by Ian McEwan
“The Shipping News” by Annie Proulx
“A Confederacy of Dunces” by John Kennedy Toole
"One Summer: America, 1927" by Bill Bryson
“The Fifth Science” by Exurb1A
"Never Let Me Go" by Kazuo Ishiguro
"Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII" by Chester Nez with Judith Schiess Avila
“The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World” by Andrea Wulf
“The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood” by James Gleick
“A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again” by David Foster Wallace
"The Remains of the Day" by Kazuo Ishiguro
"The Emperor of All Maladies" by Siddhartha Mukherjee
"The Logic of Scientific Discovery" by Karl Popper
"The Ascent of Man" by Jacob Bronowski
“Every Man for Himself and God Against All: A Memoir” by Werner Herzog
I put the list in our in-house AI and asked it to synthesize the themes all of the books shared.
Here's the answer it gave:
1. Ontological Exploration—Reality as layered construct:
From Pirsig's quality metaphysics to Dick's VALIS gnostic visions and Rovelli's quantum time
Perception as active creation: Explored through Mitchell's nested narratives (Cloud Atlas), McCarthy's post-apocalyptic sensory focus (The Road), and Bauby's locked-in perspective (Diving Bell)
1/ While playing around with our @osventuresllc AI Lab, I glanced to my right and saw "The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick" and wondered if you could create a game based on the world Dick builds in this massive tome.
It was a really fun exercise, and here's the first pass
2/ First prompt: "Please create a comprehensive review of "The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick" by Philip K. Dick and describe how one might use the insights to build a real-world game based on its views on reality"
1/ From the ever provocative Jed McKenna via JEDVAITA website--"Dreamweaver"
"Dreams feel real while we're in them, right? It's only when we wake up that we realize something was actually strange."
~Dom Cobb, Inception.
2/ "That incessant chatter going on in your head might not be mental pollution, as it seems. It might actually be how you constantly weave your dream state, yourself included, into existence.
3/ Obviously, or maybe not so obviously, your reality has no independent reality. It's all in your head, including your head.
That might be a nice thing about meditation - that you can close your eyes, turn off your brain, and spend some quality time away from the
“Think like a man of action, act like a man of thought.”
“To exist is to change, to change is to mature, to mature is to go on creating oneself endlessly.”
“The universe is a machine for the making of Gods.”
“Time is invention and nothing else.”
“Laughter is the corrective force which prevents us from becoming cranks.”
“The Eyes See Only What The Mind Is Prepared To Comprehend.”
“Creation signifies, above all, emotion, and that not in literature or art alone. We all know the concentration and effort implied in scientific discovery. Genius has been defined as an infinite capacity for taking pains.”
“No two moments are identical in a conscious being”
“We are all linked by a fabric of unseen connections. This fabric is constantly changing and evolving. This field is directly structured and influenced by our behavior and by our understanding.”
~David Bohm
2/ David Bohm was a quantum physicist whose work focused on understanding the fundamental nature of reality. Bohm's concept of implicate and explicate orders is a way of understanding the relationship between the manifest world we experience and often
3/ think of as “reality” and the underlying system that gives rise to it.
The explicate order is the consensus reality that we share directly. We perceive the world of objects, space, and time with our senses. The explicate order is what we see and experience now,