Navigating Uncertainty argues that uncertainty is not an exception to normal life—it is the normal condition of life. Modern governments, businesses, scientists and policymakers often assume that the future can be predicted and controlled through data, models and planning. Ian Scoones argues that this assumption is increasingly failing in a world shaped by climate change, pandemics, financial crises, technological disruption and geopolitical instability. Central Thesis Instead of trying to eliminate uncertainty through prediction and control, societies should learn to navigate uncertainty by: embracing flexibility rather than rigid plans, using multiple sources of knowledge, decentralizing decision-making, learning continuously, building resilient institutions rather than optimized ones. The author believes that adaptation beats prediction in complex systems. Main Arguments by Chapter 1. Understanding Uncertainty Scoones distinguishes four situations: Situation What we know R...
Billionaire's reading list: Zerodha's Nikhil Kamath rates 5 books guiding his life & strategy For a billionaire deeply rooted in the numbers-driven world of stockbroking, the revelation that human ambition is largely an unconscious attempt to escape mortality shifted his entire perspective. Wealth creation, it turned out, was less about mastering market algorithms and far more about understanding the complex tapestry of human behaviour, psychology, and our collective impermanence. Rather than looking at balance sheets, Kamath looks to a diverse library to navigate finance, life, and decision-making. Here are his top 5 picks: 1. The Mindset Behind Money: In The Psychology of Money, author Morgan Housel argues that doing well with money isn’t necessarily about what you know; it’s about how you behave. Kamath notes that the first half of the book directly resonates with people who have been fortunate in life, while the second half speaks more to those who have...