Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Links

How to Build Your Own BRK [via @Sanjay__Bakshi] (LINK)

The Popular Delusions newsletter relaunches (Dylan Grice) (LINK) [To subscribe, go HERE.]

Secrets of the Greatest Hedge Fund of All Time (video) (LINK)
Related book: The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution
Boyar Value Group's Q3 Letter (LINK)

Tech and Liberty - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

De Beers Cuts Diamond Prices by About 5% as Industry Crisis Deepens (LINK)

Invest Like the Best Podcast: George Rzepecki – Investing in Africa (LINK)

EconTalk Podcast: Venkatesh Rao on Waldenponding (LINK)

Big Questions with Cal Fussman Podcast: Charles Schwab: How To Own Your Tomorrow (LINK)

Making Sense with Sam Harris Podcast: #174 — Richard Dawkins (LINK)

The James Altucher Show (podcast): 503 - The Path to Stillness: Ryan Holiday on How to Develop Self-Discipline & Reduce Overwhelm (LINK)
Related book: Stillness Is the Key

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Links

"If you can protect downside, you don't need to figure out upside. In fact, those will give you the best upside because markets hate them till the upside is clearly visible." --Mohnish Pabrai

How did Mohnish Pabrai inspire Guy Spier? An interview in the Aquamarine Fund's office in Zurich (video) [H/T @mstafford] (LINK)

Satya Nadella at Stanford (video) (LINK)

Oaktree Insights: Emerging Markets Equities Strategy Video (LINK)

Useful Biases - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

Netflix Versus Blockbuster (LINK)

Neumann to Get Up to $1.7 Billion to Exit WeWork as SoftBank Takes Control ($) (LINK)

Death and Deals: Sick Children Suffer, Private Equity Profits (LINK)

The Joe Rogan Experience (podcast): #1366 - Richard Dawkins (LINK)

Monday, December 18, 2017

Links

End of an era: M&T's Robert Wilmers, force in community, dies at 83 [H/T Linc] (LINK)

David Einhorn | Full Q&A | Oxford Union (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Your Mom’s Basement TO A $600 Million Payday IN 4 Years (LINK)

Human Behavior and The Panic of 1907 - by John Huber (LINK)

The Story of Shorting Home Capital | Marc Cohodes Outtake | Real Vision Video (LINK)

Three Delusions: Paper Wealth, a Booming Economy, and Bitcoin - by John Hussman (LINK)

How I Built This Podcast -- LearnVest: Alexa von Tobel (LINK)

Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Matt Dillahunty (audio/podcast) (LINK)

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Links

The Great Gatsby's Long Island Mansion Listed for $17 Million (LINK)
F. Scott Fitzgerald placed his hero in this home in The Great Gatsby. Now it's being sold by James Mai, a financial whiz made immortal in The Big Short for having foreseen the 2008 financial crisis.
Critics of Controversial Insurer Dogged by Mysterious Strangers (LINK)

Discipline is having the strength to say No - by Ian Cassel (LINK)

Invest Like the Best podcast: The Wu Tang Clan of Finance, w/ Team Ritholtz (LINK)

Waking Up podcast: Sam Harris speaks with Max Tegmark about his new book Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (LINK)

Richard Dawkins on the Think Again podcast (LINK)
Related book: Science in the Soul: Selected Writings of a Passionate Rationalist
When the Moon ate the Sun - by Phil Plait (LINK)

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Links

Joel Tillinghast Finds Big Returns in Small Stocks ($) (LINK)
Related book: Big Money Thinks Small: Biases, Blind Spots, and Smarter Investing
10,000 Hours With Claude Shannon: How A Genius Thinks, Works, and Lives [H/T @chriswmayer] (LINK)
Related book: A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age
A Dozen Lessons about Product and Services Pricing (Including being “Too Hungry to Eat”) - by Tren Griffin (LINK)

A Tesla 2017 Update: A Disruptive Force and a Debt Puzzle! - by Aswath Damodaran (LINK)

Benchmark Capital sues Travis Kalanick for fraud (LINK)

Walter Isaacson video: What Leonardo can teach us (LINK)
Related book (to be released in October): Leonardo da Vinci
Scott Galloway on the FT Alphachat podcast (LINK)
Related book (to be released in October): The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google
a16z Podcast: Centers of Power, War, and History (LINK)
Related book: Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap?
A Conversation With Richard Dawkins [H/T The Browser] (LINK)
Related book: Science in the Soul: Selected Writings of a Passionate Rationalist
How Humans Turned a Sea Snake to the Dark Side - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Links

An Enterprising Thought: Cash as an Option - by Frank Martin [H/T Eric] (LINK)

Podcast: Steven Bregman On ‘The Greatest Bubble Ever’ (Passive ETF Investing) (LINK)

Ray Dalio’s updated thoughts on Donald Trump's policies and China's latest economic moves (LINK)

Apple's Strengths and Weaknesses  - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

From Startup to Scaleup | Sam Altman and Reid Hoffman (video) (LINK)

Roundup of lots of recent posts on crypto tokens (LINK)

Accelerating the Future: The Economic Impact of the Emerging Passenger Economy [H/T @AlexRubalcava] (LINK)

Nassim Taleb talks with Ron Paul (video) (LINK)

Beethoven and the Crucial Difference Between Genius and Talent (LINK)

Richard Dawkins on time [H/T The Browser] (LINK)
Related book (released in August): Science in the Soul: Selected Writings of a Passionate Rationalist - by Richard Dawkins
Book of the day (from a few years ago): Catastrophic Care: Why Everything We Think We Know about Health Care Is Wrong

Friday, February 17, 2017

Links

"The idea that life is a series of adversities and that each one is an opportunity to behave well instead of badly is a very, very good idea." -Charlie Munger

For those in the U.S., the first episode of Planet Earth II airs tomorrow (Saturday) on BBC America (LINK)

Elon Musk Is Really Boring (LINK)

What Matters Most - by Ian Cassel (LINK)

Five Good Questions for Erik Kobayashi-Solomon about his book The Intelligent Options Investor (video) (LINK)

A 10-minute video from Nassim Taleb about public (mis)understanding of risk (LINK)

Exponent podcast: Episode 104 — Snap’s Gingerbread Strategy (LINK)

Paul Mason: "PostCapitalism" | Talks at Google (video) (LINK)

James Gleick: "Time Travel: A History" | Talks at Google (video) (LINK)

Take a Break from Your Frantic Day & Let Alan Watts Introduce You to the Calming Ways of Zen (video) (LINK)
Related book: The Way of Zen
Jared Diamond in conversation with Richard Dawkins - The Use of Religion (video) (LINK) [Related books: Diamond, Dawkins]

Yosemite's rare 'firefall' phenomenon attracts tourists and photographers [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Book of the day (given Munger's praise of Maimonides at the Daily Journal meeting): Maimonides: The Life and World of One of Civilization's Greatest Minds

Friday, January 20, 2017

Links

“Charlie and I continue to believe that short-term market forecasts are poison and should be kept locked up in a safe place, away from children and also from grown-ups who behave in the market like children.” -Warren Buffett, 1992 Letter to Shareholders

Warren Buffett says the US will do fine under Trump because we've got the 'secret sauce' (short video and article) (LINK)

AIG to Pay Berkshire $9.8 Billion in Insurance Transfer Deal (LINK)

Student Debt Payback Far Worse Than Believed (LINK)

The Most Coveted Ball in Golf Is From Costco (LINK)

The Art of Holding - by Ian Cassel (LINK)

January 2017 Data Update 3: Cracking the Currency Code - by Aswath Damodaran (LINK)

Five Good Questions for Marko Dimitrijevic about his book Frontier Investor (video) (LINK)

Exponent Podcast: Episode 101 — TV is the Oak Tree  (LINK)

The Illusions Driving Up US Asset Prices - by Robert Shiller (LINK)

Some videos from the World Economic Forum in Davos (more HERE):

A Conversation With George Soros at Davos 2017

Ray Dalio: Populism Threatens Multinational Corporations

The Crisis of the Middle Class: Davos Panel (Ray Dalio, et al.)

Davos 2017 - Strategic Update: The Future of Innovation

Davos 2017 - An Insight, An Idea with Sergey Brin

Davos 2017 - An Insight, An Idea with Jack Ma

Davos 2017 - An Insight, An Idea with Ginni Rometty

Davos 2017 - Artificial Intelligence

Davos 2017 - Strategic Update: The Future of Finance

Davos 2017 - The Global Fintech Revolution

Davos 2017 - Strategic Update: The Future of Energy [I don't have any idea if this is true, and it is dangerous to make an investment on any kind of macro forecast, but it was an interesting enough comment that I thought was worth mentioning, though it's also worth remembering that demand is only one side of the supply/demand equation: "Last year...less than one car [sold in a] hundred was an electric car...If we were to assume that, as of tomorrow, every second car sold was an electric car...for twenty-five years, global oil demand will still continue to grow.']

An Evening with Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris (audio) (Part 1, Part 2)

Most Primate Species Threatened With Extinction, Scientists Find (LINK)

Decoding the Origami That Drives All Life - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Books of the day:

The Transformed Cell (1992) [H/T Peter Attia]

Humans Are Underrated: What High Achievers Know That Brilliant Machines Never Will - by Geoff Colvin

I'm not sure I had previously read Martin Luther King Jr.'s entire "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." But given the recent holiday in his honor, I decided to give it a listen on Audible, and I think it'll now be something I listen to every year. Here's one particular quote that I saved: 
"My friends, I must say to you that we have not made a single gain in civil rights without determined legal and nonviolent pressure. Lamentably, it is an historical fact that privileged groups seldom give up their privileges voluntarily. Individuals may see the moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture; but, as Reinhold Niebuhr has reminded us, groups tend to be more immoral than individuals."

Monday, July 25, 2016

Links

1998 video: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates Discuss Innovation, Business and Success [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)
Related article about the event: The Bill & Warren Show
1960 Speech by Dave Packard to HP Managers [H/T @trengriffin] (LINK)
Related book: The HP Way
Trust experts on anything but the future - by Matt Ridley (LINK)

Stock Investors Pay Up for Peace of Mind [H/T @jasonzweigwsj] (LINK)
Related previous link: Horizon Kinetics: How Indexation is Creating New Opportunities for Short-Sellers, And Why This Should Alarm Ordinary Buyers of Stock and Bond ETFs
EconTalk: Angela Duckworth on Grit (LINK)
Related book: Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance
Intelligence Squared - “Richard Dawkins: The Rational Revolutionary” (podcast) (LINK) [Related books HERE.]

Hawaii's Lava Flow Is a Mesmerizing Force (video) (LINK)

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Links

As this year's Daily Journal Annual Meeting draws near, it may be a good time to review some notes from last year. There are some free ones out there, but the most extensive ones are the ones Shane Parrish put together for $49. If you haven't seen them yet: Daily Journal 2015 Meeting Notes

Edge.org - About Richard Dawkins: On the 40th Anniversary of "The Selfish Gene" (LINK)

What’s Wrong With Craig Venter? -- Craig Venter, multi-millionaire maverick, says he can help you live a better, longer life. [H/T The Big Picture] (LINK)

The Brazilian Doctors Who Sounded the Alarm on Zika and Microcephaly (LINK)

a16z Podcast: Building Affirm, and Why Max Levchin Has Watched Seven Samurai 100-Plus Times (LINK)

Five Good Questions for Tadas Viskanta about his book Abnormal Returns (LINK)

ValueWalk interviews my friend Christian Olesen (Part 1, Part 2)

Monday, February 1, 2016

Links

I'm getting caught up after being away for a bit, so some of these are several days old...

The Best Teacher I Never Had - By Bill Gates (LINK)
Thirty years ago I went on vacation and fell for Richard Feynman. 
A friend and I were planning a trip together and wanted to mix a little learning in with our relaxation. We looked at a local university’s film collection, saw that they had one of his lectures on physics, and checked it out. We loved it so much that we ended up watching it twice. Feynman had this amazing knack for making physics clear and fun at the same time. I immediately went looking for more of his talks, and I’ve been a big fan ever since. 
.......... 
Related books:  
Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher  
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!  (also a good audiobook)
"What Do You Care What Other People Think?" (also a good audiobook)
Musk vs. Buffett: The Billionaire Battle to Own the Sun (LINK)

As Berkshire Hathaway meeting set to be streamed online, will fewer make Omaha pilgrimage? [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Conversation that Matters: Freeman Dyson (video, from last year) [H/T @SpaceWeather101] (LINK)
Related previous post: The Civil Heretic 
Related link: Freeman Dyson: By the Book  
Related book: Dreams of Earth and Sky
Nearly all of our medical research is wrong (LINK)

Matt Ridley reassesses Richard Dawkins's pivotal reframing of evolution, 40 years on. (LINK)
Related book: The Selfish Gene [And on a related note, one of the key things on my mental model to-do list is to go a little deeper into the differences between Dawkins and E.O. Wilson and their disagreements about things.... A small example of which can be found in the article: Biological warfare flares up again between EO Wilson and Richard Dawkins]
Investing by Design: Parallels between Architecture and Investing (LINK)

Graham & Doddsville newsletter, Winter 2016 (LINK)

Ray Dalio: Pay attention to long-term debt cycle (LINK)

The Absolute Return Letter, February 2016 (LINK)

Mutual Fund Observer, February 2016 (LINK)

Theranos Is Running Out of Time (video plays) (LINK)

Alphabet Passes Apple To Become the World’s Most Valuable Company (LINK)


Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Gas Pedal Is Useless When The Spark Plugs Are Gone (LINK) [On a side note, I've gotten several comments about why I link to John Hussman, both because of his more macro focus and what I suspect is a poor record post economic crisis. The reason is that I respect the work he does, and I always think it is good to read things by people whom one thinks are informed about what they are talking about, even if one disagrees about the applicability and predictability of much of what they say. When it comes to the macro, I like to take the approach of being a risk-identifier--as opposed to being a forecaster--and so listening to people who are intelligent and spend way more time on certain macro things than I do helps me get a sense for whether or not I might be missing something big while I spend most of my time thinking about individual companies. And because this blog also serves as a bit of a real-time journal for me as to what was going on at a given time and to see what I thought was interesting at a given time as I get older and (hopefully) wiser, having him write weekly and highlight certain key developments in the macro landscape, sentiment readings, implied market returns and valuations, etc. is a great point-in-time summary that I can review years down the road by just posting some key paragraphs about something I might not touch on anywhere else. The excerpt from this week's comment below is an example of that.]
Last week, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, supported by a slim 5-4 board vote, announced a move to cut short-term interest rates to negative -0.1%, effectively charging banks for deposits held with the BOJ. While the knee-jerk response to central bank easing moves is invariably positive, investors should be careful to recognize the context surrounding this move. Based on the broad market action of Nikkei component stocks, market internals in Japan have deteriorated sharply since December, in contrast to most of the period since August 2012. Following a doubling of the Nikkei over that horizon, the current policy shift comes at a time when both valuations and market internals in Japan have shifted to the most unfavorable status in years. 
...What’s somewhat striking is that having moved the Japanese monetary base from 20% of GDP to more than 75% of GDP in recent years, with very little economic response, anyone would seriously call this liquidity “ammunition.” From an economic perspective, the expansion in the BOJ balance sheet has been accompanied by a precisely offsetting collapse in monetary velocity, with little effect on either real GDP or inflation. From a speculative perspective, while the Nikkei Index remains lower than it was in 1986, 30 years ago, investors have demonstrated risk-seeking inclinations in recent years, holding the Nikkei above its 40-week average during most of the period from 2012 until mid-December of last year. 
At present, however, one should take quite a negative signal from the BOJ's action, because it's clearly a response to deteriorating economic prospects. A favorable shift in market internals would be supportive of speculation in Japan, but that possibility should be monitored explicitly. One can’t rule it out, but there is no inherent or reliable tendency for central bank easing to reverse unfavorable market internals, or to avoid steep further market losses (recall 2000-2002 and 2007-2009 in the U.S.).

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Richard Dawkins talks with Robert Krulwich at the 92nd Street Y

Discussing his latest book, Brief Candle in the Dark , and many other things (for more related books, see HERE).


Link to video

Friday, October 2, 2015

Links

Munger residents praise unique living environment [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Are Buybacks an Oasis or a Mirage? (LINK)
Key Points 
1. In 2014, the S&P 500 Index’s dividend (1.9%) + buyback (2.9%) yield = 4.8%, but this yield was not realized by investors. 
2. As in most years, in 2014 issuance of new shares—for management compensation, new investments, and funding mergers and acquisitions—exceeded buybacks. 
3. The dilution rate for the U.S. equity market in 2014 was 1.8% compared to the historical dilution rate of 1.7% over the 80-year period from 1935 to 2014.  
4. U.S. equity investors in aggregate—contrary to appearances—have not realized a benefit from the recent spate of stock repurchases.
Related link to the above: Warren Buffett on Share Repurchases

Mutual Fund Observer, October 2015 (LINK)

Value Investing Podcast: Christopher Pavese on His Value Investment Philosophy (LINK)

Deutsche Bank Mistaken for Bundesbank Saved on Funding Costs [H/T Phil] (LINK)

How Steve Jobs Fleeced Carly Fiorina [H/T The Big Picture] (LINK)

Richard Dawkins discusses his book Brief Candle in the Dark with the WSJ (video) [H/T Will] (LINK)

Behold, the Mess That Is Pluto's Moon Charon (LINK)

Friday, September 4, 2015

Links

How America Lost Track of Ben Franklin’s Definition of Success [H/T @AlexRubalcava] (LINK) [Related book: The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin]
According to Franklin, what mattered in business was humility, restraint, and discipline. But today’s Type-A MBAs would find him qualified for little more than a career in middle management.
FRMO Corp. - Fiscal 2015 Letter to Shareholders [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

The IPhone Company: Apple's financial dependence on the smartphone is increasing (LINK)

John Malone’s Return to The US Cable Industry (LINK)

Some Thoughts on Coal Companies and Railroads (LINK)

Aswath Damodaran: The Fed, Interest Rates and Stock Prices: Fighting the Fear Factor (LINK)

Brain Pickings on Freeman Dyson's Dreams of Earth and Sky (LINK)

Richard Dawkins’ final interview with Christopher Hitchens [H/T The Browser] (LINK)
The 2011 Christmas issue of the New Statesman was guest edited by Richard Dawkins. This is his interview with Christopher Hitchens from that issue. It was to be Hitchens' final interview; he died as it was published. A sensation at the time, it is now available to read online for the first time.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Richard Dawkins at the 2014 Hay Festival


Link to video

....................

Related books, HERE.

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

This Is My Vision Of "Life": A Conversation With Richard Dawkins

Link to: This Is My Vision Of "Life": A Conversation With Richard Dawkins
My vision of life is that everything extends from replicators, which are in practice DNA molecules on this planet. The replicators reach out into the world to influence their own probability of being passed on. Mostly they don't reach further than the individual body in which they sit, but that's a matter of practice, not a matter of principle. The individual organism can be defined as that set of phenotypic products which have a single route of exit of the genes into the future. That's not true of the cuckoo/reed warbler case, but it is true of ordinary animal bodies. So the organism, the individual organism, is a deeply salient unit. It's a unit of selection in the sense that I call a "vehicle". 
There are two kinds of unit of selection. The difference is a semantic one. They're both units of selection, but one is the replicator, and what it does is get itself copied. So more and more copies of itself go into the world. The other kind of unit is the vehicle. It doesn't get itself copied. What it does is work to copy the replicators which have come down to it through the generations, and which it's going to pass on to future generations. So we have this individual replicator dichotomy. They're both units of selection, but in different senses. It's important to understand that they are different senses. 
....................

Related books, HERE.

If you haven't seen them yet, Dawkins also narrates abridged versions of On the Origin of Species and The Voyage of the Beagle which are worthwhile.

Monday, March 9, 2015

Links

The first time Buffett, Osborne and 18 others were mentioned in The World-Herald [H/T Linc] (LINK)

StarTalk Live! Podcast: Evolution with Richard Dawkins and Bill Nye (Part 2) (LINK) [Related books, with The Ancestor's Tale added from last time, HERE. I also have some other evolution-related books HERE.]

The Brooklyn Investor on the Alleghany Annual Report (LINK)

I posted this a few weeks ago, but the Kyle Bass video interview is making the rounds again, so in case you missed it... (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: What Does That Difference Mean? (LINK)
The early weeks of 2015 are the first time in history that both 10-year Treasury yields and our estimates of prospective 10-year nominal total returns for the S&P 500 have both declined below 2% annually. Even at the 2000 peak, when our 10-year total return projections were negative, the 10-year Treasury yield was 6.8%, and small capitalization stocks showed reasonable value, particularly on a relative basis. Presently, long-term bonds provide nowhere to hide, and median equity valuations exceed those at the 2000 peak on price/earnings, price/revenue, and enterprise value/EBITDA. Because of yield-seeking speculation, stock and bond prices today are already where they are likely to be many years from today. Prices are likely to experience an interesting and volatile trip to nowhere in the interim. 
We saw a noteworthy piece from an analyst named Jonathan Selsick last week. Essentially, Selsick examined the Shiller P/E (the S&P 500 divided by the 10-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings), and showed that the multiple is even better correlated with actual subsequent S&P 500 total returns using 16-year smoothing and a 16-year investment horizon. 
... 
At present, the Shiller-16 (along with a broad range of other historically reliable valuation measures having strong correlation with actual subsequent returns) projects negative total returns for stocks on a 6-year horizon, even assuming continued growth in GDP, revenues, earnings, and other fundamentals. Indeed, current valuations match the levels observed at the 1929 peak. That certainly doesn't imply that equally catastrophic losses are likely to follow (stocks lost 85% of their value from 1929 to 1932 as valuations collapsed from historic highs to historic lows, and keep in mind that even moving from a 70% loss to an 85% loss involves losing half of your money, which is why I insisted on stress-testing in 2009). Still, we believe that projecting a loss for the S&P 500, including dividends, on a 6-year horizon, is an evidence-based estimate, reflecting assumptions that are very much in the middle-of-the road. In other words, we see that expectation as just about right.

Friday, March 6, 2015

Links

Scott Adams: Try This Trick to Improve Focus (LINK)

A rare interview with Frank Martin, via the always excellent work of The Manual of Ideas (LINK)
Related link: Frank Martin's 2014 Annual Letter
The Brooklyn Investor comments on the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report (LINK)
Related previous post: A few comments on the Berkshire Hathaway letter to shareholders
Tim Ferriss talks with Mark Hart and Raoul Pal on his podcast: Hedge Funds, Investing, and Optimizing Lifestyle (LINK)

The British Origins of the US Endowment Model (LINK)

Ross Ashcroft talks to George Cooper, author of Money, Blood and Revolution (audio) (LINK)

Five Good Questions for Scott Fearon about his book Dead Companies Walking (LINK)

An interview with Jony Ive: The man behind the Apple Watch (LINK)

StarTalk Live! Podcast: Evolution with Richard Dawkins and Bill Nye (Part 1) (LINK) [Related books, in what I think is a decent order in which to read them, HERE.]

Quote of the day, which has been posted on the blog before HERE, but is worth repeating many times over: “Most geniuses—especially those who lead others—prosper not by deconstructing intricate complexities but by exploiting unrecognized simplicities.” (The article it originally came from was a January 2014 article describing Peyton Manning, HERE.)

That quote also led me back to another excerpt from that same ECAM letter, which described one of the biggest sources of business (and investment) failure:
Overreaching is one of most common causes of death in trees as it creates an air pocket in the trees’ pipes, xylem, which is why trees will often rot from the inside out. 
Enduring businesses avoid this fate by employing resolute incremental growth. The stewards of these enduring businesses know that most business failures are the direct result of overreaching. Instead of incremental progress, they overreach in an effort to ‘get theirs now.’ Quite often, that unnecessary “extra” decays the organization from the inside out. If you study business failure, you can point to overreaching as the single biggest cause of dialectical materialism in business. We see it every day in the marketplace, in how management rewards themselves with options, and in how management teams follow inferior mergers and acquisitions strategies. How often do we see mergers and acquisitions work well in biology? It is a biologically flawed objective, so why should it work seamlessly in business? It is a short-cut strategy to produce growth that often creates that same embolism that will eventually rot the decent business as they try to merge contrasting DNAs. There are evolved business systems that can integrate mergers and acquisitions well, but they are outliers.
And both the quote and excerpt above also reminded me of a reply Peter Bevelin gave in one of my interviews with him:
As Munger says: “All I want to know is where I’m going to die so I’ll never go there.” When I hear them at the annual meeting, I am thinking about Einstein’s reply to a student. The student had challenged Einstein’s statement that the laws of physics should be simple by asking: “What if they aren’t simple?” Einstein replied, “Then I would not be interested in them.”  
They have a unique ability to distinguish masses of trivia from what is really important – to filter out situations, and find what’s at their core. They tell the simple, blunt truth rather than say things that sound good.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Links

Don Graham’s Insights Into Berkshire Hathaway And Warren Buffett (LINK)
Related book: Berkshire Beyond Buffett
Andrew Smithers: Buybacks and the parallel universe of investment bankers (LINK)
The damage done to the UK and US economies by buybacks in preference to capital investment was a central theme of my book The Road to Recovery, and it has found its way, not too often I hope, into these blogs. I have therefore been heartened by the growing interest shown by the financial press in this threat to our economies.
Brain Pickings: Richard Dawkins on The Science of Why You Are Lucky to Be Alive (LINK)
Related book: Unweaving the Rainbow
An excerpt from the book Animal Weapons: The Evolution of Battle (LINK)

Thursday, July 10, 2014

River Out of Eden and A Universe from Nothing

In a recent reddit Q&A for the movie The Unbelievers, Richard Dawkins and Lawrence Krauss mentioned their favorite books by the other:

Lawrence Krauss:
My favorite book of Richard's is River Out of Eden. It is the most beautifully concise description of evolution I've ever read, I liked it so much I sent Richard a fan letter when it appeared.
Richard Dawkins (his pick was also a Charlie Munger pick):
Universe from Nothing is my favourite book by Lawrence. Beautiful example of my maxim "If you could do physics by common sense, we wouldn't need physicists"
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Dawkins' other prominent books on evolution are listed, HERE.