Fooled by Randomness
A little light holiday reading with BullionVault's director, Paul
Tustain...
The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What it
Means by George Soros (Amazon:
1586486837)
Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb (Amazon:
0141031484)
The Fabric of
Reality by David Deutsch (Amazon: 014027541X)
THE FIRST
THING you notice from the
three arbitrary choices I made for holiday reading this summer is a mutual reverence for Karl
Popper.
Popper was (I now know) a famous philosopher of science whose message was something like "You can never
prove a theory; you can only
disprove it.
"Moreover," says Popper's work, "if the theory doesn't attempt
to predict results which, if
demonstrated untrue, show its falseness, then it wasn't a useful theory in the first place, and might as
well be
astrology."
Now let's turn to my three holiday books, and we'll start with
George Soros.
George Soros is very rich. From what he does and writes, I would say he
is an exceptionally nice and
decent man, too. I have no doubt he has a genuine desire to leave the world a better place.
Unfortunately,
however, his book doesn't really do this.
The problem here is that Mr. Soros
is not happy with his
acknowledged status as a great speculator. He yearns – rather touchingly – for recognition as a
philosopher, and to this end he
devised a theory of "reflexivity" which seems to crop up in everything he writes.
It is the worst type of
theory, claiming to explain what has already happened. But because it offers nothing genuinely
analytical it has no predictive
power.
None of that would matter if the book itself were mainly about the
subject advertised in the title
– the credit crunch – on which Mr Soros writes with typical insight. Regrettably, that insight is
contained in the final dozen pages
of the book, and you will be well and truly exhausted by the long-winded and earnest attempt at
philosophy before you get
there.
The credit crunch content and reference in the title must have been
marketing devices recommended
by his publishing agent. Too bad.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb – I
would guess – is almost
completely opposite to George Soros. He is not as rich, and probably lacks the human qualities which
make Soros endearing.
Taleb writes with over-confidence bordering on arrogance. He doesn't plead with you to
take his theories seriously,
and he'd probably look down his nose at dissenters.
Taleb also has an
unnecessary habit of dropping in
repeated literary references whose objective seems to be to boast his intellectual credentials. This
ought to make his book irksome,
but strangely it doesn't. Taleb is writing on an original and worthwhile subject (which, thankfully,
tallies with his title) and he
has taken the time to gather his data and make his case.
Once you're on his
side, the frequent missiles
are aimed at everyone but you, and then the book even becomes entertaining.
Read this book because it will
train you quickly to see through the meaningless statistics with which so many products, people and
ideas try to sell themselves. It
left me with the strangest impression. Could the great man – Soros himself – be at least partially the
result of a world which is
"Fooled by Randomness".
Finally, David Deutsch. He's of far
higher intellectual standing
than either Soros or Taleb, having a raft of important scientific papers to his name. The point of his
book – The Fabric of
Reality – is to demand that science offers explanations in tandem with the opaque mathematical
theories which explain observed
results.
That sounds pretty reasonable to anyone who hasn't had a look under
the surface of quantum
physics, where experimental results set an enormous challenge to would-be-explainers. And so Deutsch is
dragged by his own explanatory
mission to an extraordinary description of reality - the "multiverse".
The
general idea is that the
universe (which used to mean everything) is actually only things which we can observe. Whereas the
multiverse, in contrast, includes
all the things that we will never see and which it is physically impossible for us to access or
measure.
Lots of people who have struggled with understanding quantum physics have settled on a multiverse. Few
have concluded that the atoms
in a zillion parallel universes have arranged themselves as a zillion copies of you and me each in its
own rather narrow universe,
doing almost exactly the same things as us, but differentiated by random quantized results at the
sub-atomic level.
Frankly this is all rather silly, and Popper – with has reputation for verifiability –
would surely have worried about
the damage to his blossoming brand upon seeing his name in Deutsch's dedication.
Nevertheless, there is
one repeating aspect of this book which I found intriguing. Deutsch is an acknowledged expert on virtual
reality. His book – for all
its craziness and complexity – does persuade me that I am a fairly sophisticated virtual reality
generator.
You see, there is nothing "real" about "blue", nor about "wet" or "sweet". The sensation of each is a
creation within my
consciousness, and it has evolved biologically to keep the genes which make brains being
reproduced.
So
what is genuinely real? That is what The Fabric of Reality is about. I don't believe the book
approaches the answer, but it
does raise questions, and few things are more agreeable to me (and perhaps George Soros, too) than
idling away a bit of pool-side time
with the book face-down, pondering questions, prompted by what I just read, of how everything actually
works. This book produces those
moments.
Surely that's worth £10.99 – or even just $10.88 for US buyers – of
anyone's money.