Seeking theoretical perfection or maximum efficiency often makes things more fragile and prone to disruption in practice.
Overoptimization narrows tolerances, removes redundancies and streamlines away safety nets that provide resilience.
It is better to favor empirically antifragile systems and activities that gain from uncertainty over theoretically optimal but fragile ones.
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The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms" is a book written by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. It was published in 2010 and is a collection of aphorisms, or short philosophical sayings, on topics such as randomness, uncertainty, and human nature. The title of the book refers to the Greek myth of Procrustes, a bandit who would stretch or amputate his captives to fit them to the size of his iron bed. Taleb uses this story as a metaphor for the dangers of forcing people or ideas into predetermined categories or molds.
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