Appreciate your concern and the link. It sounds like you like this guy’s writing so I’ll try to be nice.
When I first read this I thought it was surely a satirical piece from something like
The Onion. Then I googled his name and found out he’s actually a published rich venture capitalist.
I will give him some points for originality in trying to find a link between psychology, spirituality and investing. In the end, however,it ends up being diffuse and ineffectual in the real world.
When I say spirituality i’m alluding to his thinly veiled plagiarism of Buddhist tenants. Did he really think nobody would catch that? His talk of needing to experience extremes, letting go of ego, embracing humility, etc to find truth (read
Sidhartha).
Some of the statements he makes are ridiculously obvious. Other statements use tortured logic in an attempt to find some psychological truism: This is that because that is this + an aphorism or red hearing quote or historical cite. Therefore, we should take the path of the the Middle Way to achieve our enlightened investment goal. This formula is repeated over and over ad nauseam perhaps in the attempt to make his premise ring true if he repeats it enough times. One eventually wonders who he is trying to convince, the audience or himself.
A play on our subconscious wish for this spiritual/psychological state be true or maybe just a smart man making money pushing his new book?