I have no opinion on the book and I don't even know what it is about but I think someone should congratulate you on the ability to read and focus in a doctors office. Every single time I have been in a doctors office there is always a loud kid or the staff is extra loud with their gossiping. I pretend to check my phone to avoid talking to anyone. Unless you went with an audio version, maybe that is the way to go! (Next sle book review location: heavy metal mosh pit!)What are people thoughts on this book and that approach to life? I accidentally ended up reading it and was unimpressed (was stuck in a doctors office with nothing else on my phone). The whole book is a mix of "inspirational reading" and oddly biased statistical studies.
I am kida-of a perfectly wrong audience for the book (qualitatively minded, critical and already in the cohort the author is describing) so I was primarily interested in the message. My sense is that the author wants to get across two key ideas - (a) live below your means and (b) it's all about choices and not luck.I read that book what seemed like a different lifetime ago.
Ha, interesting. In general, I don't like most of the Talebs writings but I think here he might be spot on.Taleb lashes out about this book in one of his book (i think fooled by randomness).
It is about survivor-ship bias and poor statistics
Not at this office, even the kids that come there are pretty quiet. Unfortunately.Every single time I have been in a doctors office there is always a loud kid or the staff is extra loud with their gossiping.
"....wives cancer treatment". This is what Taleb found issue with, that life is more random than the Millionaire author believes. 2 different philosophies.I am kida-of a perfectly wrong audience for the book (qualitatively minded, critical and already in the cohort the author is describing) so I was primarily interested in the message. My sense is that the author wants to get across two key ideas - (a) live below your means and (b) it's all about choices and not luck.
I think while (a) is very smart (I have a horrible story to tell about it), (b) is full of shit. While most millionaires are first generation, if you look at their upbringing, it's rarely of poverty (so the starting point matters). Then, the whole road is so path dependent, especially in the US - for every 75-year old millionaire there is a dude that had to sell his house to pay for his wives cancer treatment.
Ha, interesting. In general, I don't like most of the Talebs writings but I think here he might be spot on.
What are people thoughts on this book and that approach to life? I accidentally ended up reading it and was unimpressed (was stuck in a doctors office with nothing else on my phone). The whole book is a mix of "inspirational reading" and oddly biased statistical studies.
Well, apparently the author himself did not really follow his recipe. In 2013, Stanley died driving a Chevrolet Corvette, a car at the time retailing for over $50,000. American public likes a winner while nobody cares about the losers, so the attitude is consistent.Follow the book and the odds end up in your favor. However, the whole brown bag lunch strategy is no panacea for all of life's unexpected ills.