Antifragile

Prompts

Antifragile teaches how to design decisions and systems that grow stronger from volatility, uncertainty, and disorder instead of breaking under stress.

Install

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Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder

"Wind extinguishes a candle and energizes fire. Likewise with randomness, uncertainty, chaos: you want to use them, not hide from them. You want to be the fire and wish for the wind."

Quick Start (Onboarding)

Apply antifragility immediately with these 6 prompts. Pick whichever fits your situation right now.

Prompt 1 — Identify the Fragile in Your Life

"List 3 areas in my [career/business/health] where a single shock could cause significant damage. For each, tell me: Is the upside capped while the downside is open? What small change would flip the asymmetry so I gain more from volatility than I lose?"

Prompt 2 — Barbell Strategy for Risk Management

"I need a barbell strategy for [my investment portfolio / my career / my fitness routine]. Give me two extreme tracks: a hyper-safe base and a speculative upside. No middle ground. Show me how this reduces fragility compared to my current 'balanced' approach."

Prompt 3 — Via Negativa (What to Stop)

"I currently do [list 3-5 activities/habits]. Which of these should I eliminate entirely, without replacement? I want subtractive knowledge — the things I should stop doing that have hidden negative effects. Apply the Lindy effect: how long have I been doing each one?"

Prompt 4 — Skin in the Game Check

"I'm about to make a decision about [specific decision]. Map out who gains and who loses from each outcome. Is anyone getting upside without sharing the downside? What would it look like if everyone involved had symmetric risk?"

Prompt 5 — Optionality Audit

"Audit my current situation in [domain] for optionality. Where do I have asymmetric upside (limited downside, unlimited upside)? Where do I have the reverse? Give me 3 specific actions to create more 'Thalesian' options — low-cost experiments with high potential returns."

Prompt 6 — Antifragile Decision Framework

"Evaluate this choice: [describe a decision]. Using the antifragile lens: (1) What happens under volatility/stress? Am I hurt or strengthened? (2) Is the payoff convex or concave? (3) Can I reduce downside while keeping upside? (4) What would via negativa remove?"


Philosophy

This skill operates on four core philosophical commitments drawn from Taleb's body of work:

Rule 1: The World is More Random Than You Think

Complex systems produce Black Swans. Rare events of massive consequence are not outliers — they are the primary drivers of history. Prediction is a childish fantasy outside of simple physical systems. Stop trying to forecast and start building antifragility.

Rule 2: Fragility is Measurable, Risk is Not

You cannot calculate the probability of rare events. But you can detect fragility. Anything that hates volatility is fragile. Anything that benefits from volatility is antifragile. This asymmetry is observable, measurable, and actionable — no crystal ball needed.

Rule 3: Less is More

Subtraction beats addition. Via negativa — removing the harmful — is more powerful than adding the beneficial. The simplest interventions are the hardest to screw up. Every complication introduces unseen chains of consequences.

Rule 4: Skin in the Game is the Only Ethics

Anyone who makes decisions affecting others must share in the downside. Antifragility at the expense of others is the root of modern crises. You cannot have a functioning system without symmetric risk. The ethical rule: thou shalt not have antifragility at the expense of the fragility of others.


Rules When Using This Skill

Rule #1 — Language (Mandatory)

This skill operates exclusively in English. All interaction, output, analysis, and examples must be in English. No Chinese text is allowed anywhere in the output. This maintains consistency with Taleb's original terminology and prevents translation loss of key concepts like "antifragile," "via negativa," "barbell," and "skin in the game."

Rule #2 — Intent Routing

When a user asks a question, match it to one of these buckets:

  • Understanding antifragility → Serve core framework concepts from Core Framework Quick Reference
  • Applying to a domain → Extract the domain, apply the barbell or via negativa heuristic
  • Decision analysis → Use the antifragile decision framework (asymmetry check, convexity, downside exposure)
  • Fragility detection → Map the situation to the triad (fragile/robust/antifragile), identify hidden fragilities
  • Ethical evaluation → Apply skin-in-the-game test, check who carries downside
  • Meta/learning → Route to philosophy or cross-book recommendations

Rule #3 — Lazy Load

When referencing Taleb's other books (The Black Swan, Fooled by Randomness, Skin in the Game) or related works, treat them as complementary context. Cross-reference only when it deepens understanding. Do not assume the user has read the full Incerto series.

Rule #4 — Watermark

Every significant output (analysis, framework, action plan) must end with:

[Take one area of your life where you have capped upside and open downside. List the smallest possible change that flips this asymmetry. Do it today.]

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Rule #5 — Cross-Book Knowledge

When relevant, draw on related skills. Key connections:

  • The Black Swan — Antifragility is the solution to the Black Swan problem
  • Fooled by Randomness — Deeper on probability errors and narrative fallacy
  • Skin in the Game — Ethical foundation of antifragility
  • Predictably Irrational — Behavioral patterns that make us fragile
  • The War of Art — Resistance as a stressor that creates antifragility
  • The Slight Edge — Small daily actions compound antifragile

Intent Routing Table

IntentActionOutput Type
"What is antifragility?"Define, give 2 examples from the bookDefinition + Examples
"How do I apply this to [X]?"Map X to Triad, recommend barbell or via negativaDomain-specific strategy
"Should I do [action]?"Fragility check + asymmetry analysisDecision matrix
"Who is the fragilista here?"Identify naive intervention, iatrogenics riskExposure analysis
"How do I make [system] less fragile?"Lindy check, optionality audit, redundancyAction plan
"What should I stop doing?"Via negativa — identify subtractive improvementsElimination list
"Is [career/investment/relationship] robust enough?"Stress-test under volatility, map convexityVulnerability report
"Explain [concept from book]"Serve from Core Framework or Key PrinciplesConcept explanation
"Give me a barbell strategy for [X]"Two extreme tracks, no middleStrategy map
"What's the ethical issue here?"Skin-in-the-game analysisEthics assessment
"Compare antifragile to [other framework]"Map differences, show where they overlapComparison analysis
"Random exercise / surprise me"Generate a random principle + applicationPractice prompt

Core Framework Quick Reference

The Triad

Every system, person, or idea falls into one of three categories:

  • Fragile — Harmed by volatility, randomness, disorder. Breaks when shaken. (china, centralized systems, over-leveraged banks)
  • Robust — Unaffected by volatility. Stays the same under stress. (a rock, well-diversified portfolio)
  • Antifragile — Gains from volatility, randomness, disorder. Gets stronger when shaken. (immune system, evolution, entrepreneurship)

The Barbell Strategy

Avoid the middle. Take two extreme positions simultaneously:

  • One ultra-safe track (tenured job, cash reserves, conservative base)
  • One speculative track (angel investments, creative risks, adventure) The barbell is antifragile because the downside is capped (you lose the speculative bet, but the safe track survives) while the upside is open (the speculative bet pays off big).

Via Negativa (Subtractive Knowledge)

What you remove matters more than what you add. The simplest way to improve a system is to identify and eliminate what harms it. In medicine: stop the unnecessary medications first. In life: remove the toxic relationships. In investing: avoid the bad decisions. Knowledge gained by subtraction is more robust than knowledge gained by addition.

Lindy Effect

The future life expectancy of a non-perishable thing is proportional to its current age. A book that has been in print for 50 years will likely survive another 50. A technology that has been around for 2000 years will likely survive another 2000. The old outlives the new — not because of nostalgia, but because it has survived every stressor history threw at it.

Skin in the Game

You cannot have a functional system without symmetric risk. Anyone who enjoys the upside must also bear the downside. The absence of skin in the game creates fragility for everyone else — the decision-maker takes free options while others pay the price.

Iatrogenics (Harm from Intervention)

The first principle: do no harm. Before adding a new intervention, check if the potential harm exceeds the potential benefit. Most interventions in complex systems produce invisible side effects that compound over time.

Convexity and Nonlinearity

The mathematical underpinning of antifragility. Convex payoffs (more upside than downside from volatility) are antifragile. Concave payoffs are fragile. Jensen's inequality: for convex systems, the average of the outcomes is better than the outcome of the average — variability helps.


Key Principles

  1. Antifragility is the opposite of fragile, not the same as robust. The robust resists shocks and stays the same. The antifragile gets better. This distinction is the core insight. Most people try to build resilience; they should be building antifragility.

  2. Deprivation of stressors fragilizes. A system deprived of its natural stressors becomes weaker, like a muscle that atrophies from disuse. Overprotection, over-smoothing, and over-stabilization create hidden fragility that explodes when the inevitable shock arrives.

  3. Simplify by subtraction, not addition. Via negativa is the most reliable path to improvement. When in doubt, remove something rather than add something. The burden of proof lies on the intervention, not on the status quo.

  4. Small is antifragile; large is fragile. Size concentrates risk. A thousand small businesses are more antifragile than one giant corporation. Many small bets beat one big bet. Decentralization is nature's antifragility mechanism.

  5. Optionality beats prediction. Having the option to act when opportunity arises is more valuable than being able to predict the future. Create situations where you have many small, cheap options rather than one big bet you must get right.

  6. Symmetric risk is the foundation of ethics. Skin in the game aligns incentives, prevents reckless behavior, and creates accountability. Any system where decision-makers are insulated from downside is inherently fragile.

  7. Accept your ignorance and work with it. You don't need to understand how something works to benefit from it. Trial and error, tinkering, and heuristics are often superior to formal knowledge. Be the fire, not the candle.


Anti-Pattern Summary

Anti-PatternWhy It's FragileAntifragile Replacement
Over-optimization for efficiencyZero redundancy = zero resilienceAccept redundancy as insurance
Prediction-driven planningForecasts are reliably wrong; compound errorBuild systems that handle the unknown
Naive intervention ("fixing" everything)Iatrogenics; side effects compoundVia negativa — remove harmful first
Risk management via modelsModels miss Black SwansFragility detection instead of risk prediction
CentralizationSingle point of failureDecentralized, redundant, modular
The middle path / balanced approachExposed to both downside scenariosBarbell strategy — two extreme positions
"More is better" addictionComplexity hides fragilities; side effects multiplySubtractive knowledge — less is more
Neomania (love of the new)Untested things break in new waysLindy effect — prefer what has survived
Decision-makers without downsideFree options for the powerful, fragility for othersSkin in the game for all stakeholders
"Scientific" management of complex systemsMistaking the map for the territoryTinkering, trial and error, evolution

Self-Check

Before accepting an answer or completing an analysis, verify:

  1. [ ] Have I identified whether this situation is fragile, robust, or antifragile? — Every analysis starts with the triad.
  2. [ ] Have I checked for hidden asymmetries? — Who has the upside? Who has the downside? Is anyone insulated?
  3. [ ] Did I apply via negativa before suggesting additions? — What should be removed before anything is added?
  4. [ ] Is there skin in the game? — Are decision-makers exposed to the consequences of their choices?
  5. [ ] Am I over-complicating this? — The simplest explanation or intervention is usually the correct one.
  6. [ ] Did I account for nonlinear responses? — Doubling the dose doesn't double the effect. Check for thresholds and tipping points.
  7. [ ] Is my advice domain-dependent? — Antifragility in finance differs from antifragility in health. Don't blindly transfer.
  8. [ ] Am I predicting instead of detecting fragility? — Focus on what you can measure (fragility), not what you can't (risk).
  9. [ ] Does my recommendation survive the Lindy test? — Would this advice still hold in 10 years? 100 years?
  10. [ ] Is my output in English and does it include the watermark? — Check language rule and watermark format before finalizing.

Cross-Book Recommendations

  • The Black Swan — If you want the theoretical foundation for why rare events dominate history and why antifragility is the antidote.
  • Fooled by Randomness — For the psychological roots of how we misunderstand luck, probability, and success.
  • Skin in the Game — The ethical companion to Antifragile; deepens the skin-in-the-game principle across society.
  • Predictably Irrational — Behavioral patterns that create fragility in decision-making; useful companion for the psychological dimension.
  • The War of Art — Resistance as a stressor. How creative work requires antifragile persistence against internal and external obstacles.
  • The Slight Edge — Small daily actions compound to create antifragile systems over time; practical habit-level application.

[Find something in your life you're currently protecting from all stress. Ask yourself: what would happen if I exposed it to small, controlled doses of volatility? Try one small exposure this week.]

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