Hi,
Here we go again. The Ehlers thingie is here again. A couple of months ago we had a lengthy discussion on the merits of the "Ehlers" products. Not a single traceable reference seems to be found in the mass of his "rocket science" publications on credible backtesting of these theories, except for some paid for certification. I don't know of a single poster who after programming Ehlers formulae came up with a positive backtest! We got a lot of talented people though on ET!
I referred to this as "scientism", the hullabaloo application of rigorous mathematical concepts to fields where they do not apply. The techniques proposed by Ehlers are borrowed from systems and control theory and are successfully applied to many problems. Before you can do this though, many conditions have to be satisfied.
As to markets, what is noise? This is an interesting question. Many high powered academics have entertained us many years about this topic. What do we know about this to go on by now? Let's first try to line up what (we think) we know already about this before going any further.
If you compare this with an inertial guidance problem, engineers know darn well how to model the noise mathematically before they would think about applying the theories that Ehlers is trying to peddle for markets to the credulous.
Keep on posting about "noise" in markets. I am trying to learn from your posts, but don't post nonsense.
nononsense