I read Black Swan early in my introduction to heuristics and biases, in my teens. I remember that the book was quite illuminating for me, though I disliked Taleb’s narcissism and his disrespect for the truth. I don’t think it was so much “insightful” as helping me internalize a few big insights. The book’s content definitely overlaps a lot with beginner rationality, so you might not find it worthwhile after all. I read a bit of FbR and about half of Antifragile as well, but I found those much less interesting.
An aside: Taleb talks about general topics. It’s hard to say new things in that market (it’s saturated), and the best parts of his new insights have already become part of the common lexicon.
I read Black Swan early in my introduction to heuristics and biases, in my teens. I remember that the book was quite illuminating for me, though I disliked Taleb’s narcissism and his disrespect for the truth. I don’t think it was so much “insightful” as helping me internalize a few big insights. The book’s content definitely overlaps a lot with beginner rationality, so you might not find it worthwhile after all. I read a bit of FbR and about half of Antifragile as well, but I found those much less interesting.
An aside: Taleb talks about general topics. It’s hard to say new things in that market (it’s saturated), and the best parts of his new insights have already become part of the common lexicon.