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John Stossel notes that journalists tend to have hype extreme risks:
personal-injury lawyers get us to hype risks that barely threaten people, like secondhand smoke, or getting cancer from trace amounts of chemicals. Sometimes they even con us into scaring you about risks that don't exist at all, like contracting anti-immune disease from breast implants.

Newsrooms are full of English majors who acknowledge that they are not good at math, but still rush to make confident pronouncements about a global-warming "crisis" and the coming of bird flu.
I haven't read Taleb's Black Swan book, but it seem he's a fan of the enumeration of bizarre scenarios because one may be right. Yet that is exactly what is endemic in journalism, highlighting bizarre hypotheticals because they are merely possible, as opposed to probable. That's what is behind lotto ticket buyers--you could win!

And then there is the issue that according to Wikipedia, a Black Swan theory is about something with a large-impact and hard-to-predict. Clearly real Black swans are hard to predict, but did they have a large impact? Did the existence of Black Swans change anything? I would say no. So real Black Swans are not metaphorical Black Swans. I expect more clarity upon publication of the Black Swan.
Marcus (anonymous) meinte am 6. Apr, 17:12:
Fooled by randomness
I haven't read the Black Swan book either, but the argument was pretty central in his book Fooled by Randomness, which I recommend strongly.
A lot of Taleb’s thinking seems to stem from his background as an options trader. For example, he vigorously bashes Jim Rogers for arguing that buying options is a losing proposition since about 80% of options turn out useless. Taleb, of course, notes that this doesn’t make buying options a bad deal – if only the rest results a sufficiently high return.
So his argument, as I understood it, is simply that if an event is deemed unlikely, and you bet on it occurring, then your return if it does occur will be high. This is the ‘impact’.
In relation to 9/11, the (psychological) impact was large simply because it ex ante seemed unlikely, which led us to be psychologically unprepared when it did happen.
The term ‘the black swan theory’ was probably chosen because it’s a catchy title. But, as you suggest, the term is somewhat misleading since we do not really associate the discoveries of black swans with great cataclysmic effects. The way to understand this, I believe, is that the impact of their discovery was large only to those who had made a bet – in some form – on their existence, or non-existence. 
A.T. (anonymous) antwortete am 9. Apr, 15:36:
funny
Funny :) It looks like Mahalanobis got the idea backwards. The Black Swan is what is not discussed in papers not what is... :) 
Kevembuangga (anonymous) antwortete am 11. Apr, 14:39:
I haven't read the Black Swan book either

Neither did I ;-)
But someone else did, "pen in hand"...
Nassim Taleb's "The Black Swan" 
Hedgehog (anonymous) antwortete am 11. Apr, 20:39:
It's a nice summary
-- thanks for the link. Now I am convinced that this book would be a good read.