Authors:
  • Much of the research into humans' risk-avoidance machinery shows that it is antiquated and unfit for the modern world; it is made to counter repeatable attacks and learn from specifics. If someone narrowly escapes being eaten by a tiger in a certain cave, then he learns to avoid that cave.

    "Learning to Expect the Unexpected" by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, www.edge.org. April 19, 2004.