Friday, December 03, 2010

Nassim Taleb Imitates Kanye West


The often angry-looking Nassim Taleb just published a book of unlinked tweets: The Bed of Procrustes. It is short and has a Kindle version that costs 72 cents less than the hardcopy.

As to its flaws, it reminded me of one of my favorite aphorisms: "the man who early on regards himself as genius is lost.” He inverts the observation that geniuses are often misunderstood to the insight that misunderstood people are geniuses, and critics of such people are imbeciles who don’t even have the taste to appreciate genius. My criticisms are therefore consistent with him being right or wrong, but falsification is not symptomatic of punditry in general or Taleb in particular.

It is a golden rule not to judge men by the opinions but rather by what their opinions make of them. His many fans highlight the effect of Taleb's thinking as they speak like Renfield discussing Count Dracula:
”excellent; it's a must read ... I'll refrain from demonstrating my foolishness and ignorance by trying to interpret any of them in this forum.” ★★★★★

“Those who understand the book will refrain from summarizing its message.” ★★★★★
They sound like a cult of scared guru worshipers.

I suspect that Taleb dreams of someday winning the Nobel Prize in Economics for his popularization of Rietz’s peso problem (1988), fat-tailed distributions (Mandelbroit 1963), or Knightian uncertainty (1921), at which point he would refuse it and then raise his stature above all those before him. Alas, as defective as the econ Nobel is, it ain't the Peace Prize. He has not added any new significant idea to any of these richly researched threads, rather merely tries to convince readers he and his followers are the only ones in the world who really understand them. For example, he extensively documents that financial time series are not exactly Gaussian, something financial standard bearer Eugene Fama investigated in his 1960's dissertation. He meticulously proved something everybody in the field has known for decades.

Winston Churchill said ‘It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations’, and I agree. Many useful truths in mathematics and physics are old hat but essential pillars of wisdom, concise, and so too for the many proverbs that have been handed down to us. Readers usually retain aphorisms they parse out of an author’s sustained argument, a pithy summary (eg, Smith’s ‘By pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society more effectually than when he really intends to promote it’). Taleb knocks out the middle-man and publishes a couple hundred of his random thoughts.

Such a book needs a certain predisposition because when Chauncey Gardiner said 'there will be growth in the spring' in the movie Being There, it was considered profound basically on how you perceived the vehicle spouting such statements. Consider that the most absurd economic proposition will be taken seriously if you can find it in Keynes's General Theory, in which case, it's an argument that deserves consideration (Pay men to dig holes and fill them in again? GT p.220, really). Thus Taleb gives us these beauties:
"Fortune punishes the greedy by making him poor and the very greedy by making him rich."

"Karl Marx, a visionary, figured out that you can control a slave better by convincing him he is an employee."

"Sports femininize men and masculinize women."

"Every ten years collective wisdom degrades by half."

"The nation-state: apartheid without political incorrectness."

Perhaps his acolytes are correct, these remarks defy exegesis. But if you aren't going to make sense, you might as well be funny: Marx's 'time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana.' Taleb's humor is less like Groucho, more like Karl.


Kanye West is also very popular and like Taleb tweets his fans with petulant rants. Consider these Kanye Classics:

“Because I have sacrificed real life to be a celebrity and to give this art to people, which is great. It is great that I was able to do that…”

“I am God’s vessel. But my greatest pain in life is that I will never be able to see myself perform live.”

“You want me to be great, but you don’t ever want me to say I’m great?”

"George Bush doesn't care about black people."

Modesty is a virtue not because it implies servile humility, but because it implies a combination of honesty and knowledge. Using self-righteous anger to justify immodesty just highlights one's immaturity. Here's Taleb channeling his inner Kanye:
"Your reputation is harmed the most by what you say to defend it."

"A genius is someone with flaws harder to imitate than his qualities."

"It is a waste of emotion to answer critics."

"Bad mouthing is the only genuine expression of admiration."

"People reserve standard compliments to those who do not threaten their pride; the others they often praise by calling 'arrogant'."

"It is the appearance of inconsistency, and not its absence, that makes people attractive."

The last thing most people need to think is that criticism is mainly from fools who misunderstand genius, because as I've entered middle age and had children I have found 1) children are learning and a fast rate while most adults have stopped learning and 2) adults can avoid criticism, whereas a child cannot. These are not unrelated.

It is frustrating when people dismiss your ideas and it's comforting to imagine they are all envious fools not worthy of your genius, yet this is just succumbing to your baser instincts. Like everyone else, I don't like criticism, and when I was young I was insecure and immodest, and this hurt me in many ways. Over time wisdom has made me more confident and humble. Thus, while my CPU may be slowing and RAM shrinking, I'm processing feedback more efficiently than I used to, and I wish I appreciated the value of modesty earlier.

Criticism and advice are often wrong, but that merely highlights it is not a sufficient condition to becoming a better person, only a necessary one. Life is too short to learn everything by trial and error, so watching and listening to others is essential. A bias that critics are cretins leads to a life guided only by errors so great they can not be ignored, an inefficient path to enlightenment.

I do agree with a lot of what Taleb says, but as he is pridefully inconsistent (it makes one interesting, supposedly), this does not mean much because once you say 1+1=1, everything, true and untrue, is implied. For example, he states the detection of false patterns is a major problem, excluding the pattern of increased falsely perceived patterns; he's a rebel telling the academy what they don't want to hear, yet his arguments are based on academic science and mathematics; data are definitive and the past is misleading. These are not profound paradoxes but rather confused ramblings. It would take a lot of psilocybin for his oeuvre to seem deep to me.

An unqualified glowing NY Times review of "The Bed of Procrustes" references this interview as exemplifying his trenchant criticisms, as he states ‘we should eliminate value-at-risk.’ In The Bed, Taleb argues that 'knowledge' is knowing what does not work as opposed to what does, but this is just letting perfection being the enemy of the good. All theories are wrong, some are useful. If you eliminate Value-at-Risk, what do you replace it with?

As a tool, Value-at-Risk is better than nothing. It is also better than something like the TSA's nonquantifiable terrorist threat indicator. Indeed, one very nice thing about Value-at-Risk, it can be wrong! It can be tested and calibrated at reasonable extremums to capture some of the nonlinear risks in a portfolio, whereas threat level 'orange' remains not even wrong. A metric that captures 1 in 20 events balances the objectives of calibrating a risk metric and capturing some nonlinearity, because you need to generate real observations to calibrate (it isn't applicable to portfolios with assets held for several weeks or more). There’s a trade-off between capturing only the tail events that really matter, and empirically validating the metric.

Value-at-Risk is not perfect, but prior to this you had a jumble of indicators that were not comparable, and logically you usually can't say an array of indicators is 'high' or 'low', just that some items are higher and some are lower, and this leads to an ambiguous interpretation, and impossible testing and calibration. Imagine trying to have a discussion about risk at a desk with currency, equity, and bond exposures, all with their various derivatives. If you are not allowed to bucket risks into groups and add them up using some consistent methodology it would be an endless narrative with lots of adverbs.

As to Taleb’s admonition to not ‘confuse the map for the territory’, that was a cliche in the 1960s. More importantly, the problem is not omnipresent but rather selective, because theory-free observation is not suboptimal, rather impossible. The real issue is which theories are bad and in what ways, not that theory is bad.

For example, like Taleb, I find many economic models excessively rigorous because such theories do not add precision or clarity to an idea, only faux sophistication. Thus, Romer's growth theory, or Krugman's increasing returns to scale theory, did not add clarity to an existing debate, only false rigor to ideas more clearly and accurately stated in words. Note that even Romer and Krugman don't build arguments on their models, rather they merely use them for presenting their bona fides. The models are mainly for proving one is clever as opposed to making a novel point. A formalization of well-known arguments that disingenuously presents itself as a new theory is bad because this leads to a wasted focus. Further, some models become so convoluted they make falsification impossible, allowing an intellectual error to persist for a generation as true believers can always point to different parameterizations that work (eg, input-output macro models, large-scale Keynesian macro models, stochastic discount factors).

Hayek's theory of the importance of markets and profit-seeking in decentralizing incentives, Adam Smith's Invisible Hand, the Coase Theorem, and George Stigler’s theory of search and information, meanwhile, were real advances in our understanding of economics, and these did not entail sophisticated mathematical equations. ‘Example’ is more intellectually honest than ‘theorem’ when presenting an economic argument. Representing an idea using measure theory is considered top academic work, but it’s usually pure pedantry.

Unfortunately, the idea that some rigor is good got turned into an arms race in rigor. Really important economic ideas that necessitate heavy mathematics are rare, confined almost exclusively within game theory (eg, Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem, Harsanyi’s general Bayesian model of games, Hurwicz’s mechanism design, Meyerson’s revelation principle), and game theory itself has been much less fruitful than originally thought. Continuous time, Hilbert space, real analysis, have not added to our understanding of economic problems, they merely remind us that any simple mathematical idea can be made more rigorous.

As per unlikely events being under appreciated, I would say it is the opposite. Most internet spam and investment scams are based on things that could happen but probably won't. Improbable events, when priced, are generally overpriced, largely because they can't be hedged and markets are thin, so as a buyer of these things, you tend to overpay: out-of-the-money options, wacky investment or business ventures. As Tyler Cowen wrote in his otherwise positive review in Slate, this big idea does not work in Taleb's main field of expertise, options (peevish Taleb violated his aphorism to ignore criticism back then, and got very mad at Cowen).

This focus on the improbable can lead to excessive risk taking, such as buying lottery tickets or joining multi-level marketing schemes, and too little risk taking, as when we forgo nuclear power or irradiating eggs because of improbable nightmare scenarios. Pity the investor who bought volatility based on the idea that people under appreciate it, as the straightest volatility play, the ETF VXX, has lost 90% of its value since inception in Jan 2009. The key is not to increase the perceived probabilities of small probability events, rather get them as correct as possible. Some should go up, some down, and this is hard work.

A really good aphorism is distilled in the context of a broader set of work, such as Bertrand Russell's remark that "One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important", which for a man who spent a decade on the futile task of trying to axiomatize mathematics (later proven impossible by Kurt Gödel), is truly profound. It is advice Taleb would do well to take.

fyi: my old review of Taleb's Black Swan

28 comments:

Unknown said...

The man who performs and publishes extensive empirical research disproving the presence of a risk premium in equities takes a jab at Very Serious Economists with fancy mathematical models and indigestible statistical data that accompany them. Funny!

No, but seriously, this is a great post and I am really glad someone out there can call Taleb out with such eloquence. I would have just called him a self-important mouth-breather or something equally childish.

jsalvati said...

Just a note that fully axiomatizing math arithmetic is fully possible (and done). What Godel showed was that such a system can not both be consistent and prove itself to be consistent. You can still prove a system is consistent from outside the system, using additional axioms.

Tracy W said...

Great post. Taleb reminds me a bit of one of my professor's descriptions of Krugman:
"His ego is not one of the smaller items in the solar system."

David Kane said...

---------
game theory itself has been much less fruitful than originally thought.
---------

Surely an understatement, no? Consider the 50 since Schelling published his classic The Strategy of Conflict. Can you name a single result in game theory that is actually used by a profit making business? I am not talking about a game theorist who is a successful consultant or whatever. I am looking for some new research result --- some proof, theorem, whatever --- that causes business A to change something about what it does.

There are numerous examples from econometrics and finance, so this is not an anti-academic rant.

Unknown said...

"Modesty is a virtue not because it implies servile humility, but because it implies a combination of honesty and knowledge. Using self-righteous anger to justify immodesty just highlights one's immaturity."

That's excellent!

Eric Falkenstein said...

Aaron: I agree he's popular, but many then make bad inferences, like Black-Scholes is 'wrong' or unoriginal. I'm not trying to be mean, but is there an argument in Taleb's work that is new, true and important?

Unknown said...

"The key is not to increase the perceived probabilities of small probability events, rather to get them as correct as possible. Some should go up, some down, and this is hard work. "

To me this is the most cutting criticism of Taleb. This shows most clearly how he gets it wrong as he stands on the shoulders of giants and fails to see any further.

Anonymous said...

I find Taleb's egotism to be more charming than irritating, but it's a matter of taste.

Tal said...

Are you envious of Taleb's popularity (compared to your lack of popularity), given that you're both trying to fill a similar niche?

Anonymous said...

grandiose piece. Fine example of what i think of as falkenart.

Anonymous said...

I'm no apologist for Taleb, but I think this review is first and foremost a little childish. I can see not agreeing with Taleb's maxims, but to compare them to "tweets" when they basically read like re-written Chateaubriand is to dumb down the conversation.

Secondly, you seem to misunderstand some points. For example, this--"This focus on the improbable can lead to excessive risk taking, such as buying lottery tickets or joining multi-level marketing schemes"--is precisely what Taleb argues against in Black Swan. That was one of the points he rightly called Cowen out for. It seemed to me, before I even read Taleb's response, that Cowen had skimmed the book only before writing his review.

A final point: as vain as Taleb can be, he pretty explicitly says many of the ideas forwarded in Black Swan are not his, and he seems generous in acknowledging that. If there's value in what he's done, it's in amalgamation.

My two cents anyway...

Anonymous said...

I must take issue with the suggestion that Taleb is generous in acknowledging other people's ideas. In that torrent of abuse known as The Black Swan he goes to great lengths to convince the reader that his work is a "primary idea" and not the "rehashing of other people's work". He claims originality over Frank Knight on the grounds that Knight failed to notice that one of his two categories was empty (risks that can be modeled), and posits an explanation for Knight's inability to make the final brilliant leap. Apparently, Knight may have thought a lot but perhaps he never took risks, or lived in the vicinity of a casino.

The bookmaker's best friend should live in the vicinity of a racetrack for a while and leave us in peace. We can do without this quant spokesperson.

Anonymous said...

I thoroughly enjoyed this well written polemic of Taleb. Nothing is black and white in this world. Taleb has clearly added some value if only insofar that he's reminded us of many of the fundamental truths written by much wiser and original thinkers before him (Popper and keynes). Cheekily, Taleb's successful ideas around probability vs. causation reflects his own concept of being a surviving sample. Like Roubini he was someone who had made references and statements (along with a lot of other polemic rant) claiming the financial system was unsustainable pre financial melt down. Statistically, someone was bound to have made such comments. Like parenting books one only gets heard when one professes extreme ideas. Memes that don't play on our emotional hot buttons of fear, survival and loss aversion don't replicate and survive very long (i.e. Taleb's survivorship bias). Taleb generates strong memes that appeal to the undiscerning quasi intellectual fundmanager, which is why we are talking about him at all.

Anonymous said...

I would just offer that because Taleb's work has made it into the mainstream, millions of people like myself, who might never have been exposed to and inspired by this area of thought, have benefited immensely.

dd said...

as the straightest volatility play, the ETF VXX, has lost 90% of its value since inception in Jan 2009

ummmmm .... quite sensitive to the choice of start date here!

Mean-Mode Trader said...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taleb_distribution

Unbelievable.

Anonymous said...

One more Taleb statistic. He (most likely) has the highest ever ratio of downloads to cites on ssrn. Most downloaded and least cited. See for example:

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=970480&rec=1&srcabs=1012075

Of course he would probably say that the imbelices who write papers dont appreciate his true genius :)

Joe said...

He might have a big ego and is rude to economists, but he used his theory to trade and become well off or even rich.

The key thing that he did well was write down his theories before the crash. he might not have predicted the specific crash, but he predicted that betting the farm when you don't understand the risk will make you a turkey.

John McCormack said...

What happened to Aaron Brown's post?

Eric Falkenstein said...

John: funny. dunno. It disappeared. I didn't do it.

Seth said...

Taleb is an engaging raconteur and iconoclast. He became fascinated by the shallowness with which finance professionals tended to interpret the probabilistic mathematics they toss around so pretentiously. His genius lay in leveraging his personality into a perfect instrument for delivering an iconoclastic message about this shallowness at the very moment TV producers went looking for an entertaining spokesperson for the bear case.

The fact that Taleb is a tremendous ego doesn't change the fact that he's taking pot shots at people who (mostly) richly deserve it. Anyone less absurdly self-confident would wilt in the role he plays.

I'll continue enjoying his antics.

Anonymous said...

who's Mandelbroit??

Unknown said...

definitely falkenstine has an obsessive nassim problem.

envy, total obsessive hatred.

he has posted 100 posts so far.all the same.

Eric Falkenstein said...

Pierre: Your Master should be pleased in making the obligatory accusation. As mentioned, my comments are consistent with me being an envious fool, or correct--Kanye says the same thing about his 'player haters'. But I have 995 posts. 11 that directly discuss Taleb, 29 that mention him in an aside. So, while 'google search' on the blog url might bring up 100, that's includes multiple entries for a single post, and comments mentioning Taleb. 11 out of 995 is hardly excessive given he is popular and discusses ideas in my interest, and the hits on these posts are probably about twice my usual number.

Bob said...

This post is bollocks. After having his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus rejected for about the thirtieth time, Wittgenstein remarked: 'Casting pearls before swine is bad enough, but having them rejected is intolerable.'

Geniuses are often misunderstood, and they often take great pride in their genius and resent being ignored or ridiculed.

Unknown said...

they say that you have obsession started in 1996 with many more under pseudoname in many blogs.

how many thousand of hours you spend thinking of nassim and writing?

he bothers you.

Eric Falkenstein said...

Bob: He's a best selling author, often on TV giving advice on lots of stuff to adoring interviewers. He's hardly been rejected. His ideas haven't been embraced by economists because as mentioned, there is nothing new in there. Lots of economists have, and will, study Knightian uncertainty, the implications of fat tails, as always.
Pierre: I wrote a book on finance, and never mentionned Taleb. Aaron Brown reviewed it, and complained that I didn't mention him! I don't think he has anything to say, but I recognize people like to hear about him. Taleb and his acolytes cast ad hominems on me and point to his popularity or putative investing acumen, tactics even he would consider pathetic in others. The bottom line is: what sort of dossier would you construct in place of a VAR report? What specific refinement to option models would you suggest? For one dismissive of critics, his work is basically one big unfocused criticism against caricatures, straw men. There's no substantively useful idea in his writings that was said decades ago, and better, by others.

Anonymous said...

I read Taleb's new 'book' in less than an hour (it's a ~115 page list of quotes) and there are tons of logical inconsistencies. Maybe 30 of his statements are pretty good, though.

I think he is a man who reads broadly and repackages the ideas of others into his own words.