More on George

"It takes a low entropy (predictable) carrier to bear high entropy
(surprising) information. All information migrates to predictable sine
waves of the electromagnetic spectrum." - George Gild
er


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"A lot of people look at the stock price, when they should be looking
at the company... It is easier to choose companies which are going to succeed than to predict short term variations."-Claude Shannon

 

   "The only remedy for risk is knowledge." -George Gilder

 


Ken Fisher's Three Questions that Count:

Number one: What do I believe that is actually false?

Number two: What can I fathom that others find unfathomable?

Number three: What is my brain doing to blindside me now




Born in 1939 in New York City, George Giler attended Exeter Academy and Harvard University.  At Harvard, he studied under Henry Kissinger and helped found Advance, a journal of political though, which he edited and helped to re-establish in Washington, DC after his graduation in 1962.  Duing this period he co-authored (with Bruce Chapman) The Party That Lost Its Head.  He later returned to Harvard as a fellow at the Kennedy Institute of Politics and the editor of the Ripon Forum.  In the 1960s Mr. Gilder also served as a speechwriter for several prominent officials and candidates, including Nelson Rockefeller, George Romney and Richard Nixon.  In the 1970s, as an independent researcher and writer, Mr. Gilder began an excursion into the causes of poverty which resulted in his books Men and Marriage (1972) and Visible Man (1978); and hence, of wealth, which led to his best-selling Wealth and Poverty (1981).  

Mr. Gilder pioneered the formulation of supply-side economics when he served as Chairman of the Lehrman Institute's Economic Roundtable, as Program Director for the Manhattan Institute, and as a frequent
contributor to A.B. Laffer's economic reports and the editorial page
of The Wall Street Journal.

In the 1980s he also consulted leaders of America's high technology
businesses. According to a study of presidential speeches, Mr. Gilder
was President Reagan's most frequently quoted living author. In 1986,
President Reagan gave George Gilder the White House Award for
Entrepreneurial Excellence.

In 1996 Gilder was made a Fellow of the International Engineering
Consortium. The investigation into wealth creation led Mr. Gilder into
deeper examination of the lives of present-day entrepreneurs,
culminating in many articles and a book, The Spirit of Enterprise
(1986). The book was revised and republished in 1992. That many of the
most interesting current entrepreneurs were to be found in high
technology fields also led Mr. Gilder, over several years, to examine
this subject in depth. In his best-selling work, Microcosm (1989), he
explored the quantum roots of the new electronic technologies. A
subsequent book, Life After Television, was a prophecy of the future
of computers and telecommunications and a prelude to his book on the
future of telecommunications, Telecosm (2000).

Mr. Gilder's latest book The Silicon Eye (2005) travels the rocky road
of the entrepreneur on the promising path of disruption, and
celebrates some of smartest-and most colorful-technology minds of our
time. In this fascinating narrative of personality and technology,
Gilder shares his insider knowledge of Silicon Valley and illustrates
how the unpredictable mix of genius, drive, and luck that can turn a
startup into a Fortune 500 company.

Gilder Publishing produces the annual Gilder/Forbes Telecosm, which
offer selite analysis of ascending and disruptive technologies
affecting management and investment decisions of investors,
executives, engineers and entrepreneurs.

Mr. Gilder is a contributing editor of Forbes magazine and a frequent
writer for The Economist, The American Spectator, the Harvard Business
Review, The Wall Street Journal, and other publications. He lives in
Tyringham, Massachusetts, in the Berkshire Mountains, where he is an
active churchman, sometime runner, and with his wife Nini, parent of
four children.