Do you see patterns in Random Walks?

Quote from SunTrader:

Boris Schlossberg: "Price patterns are simply the reflection of human reactions of fear and greed to ever-changing news flow. They are not some randomly generated numbers from an Excel spreadsheet, even though they make look very similar. This is the critical flaw of pure randomness theorists - just because random functions can often mimic price patterns does not mean that price patterns themselves are random."

In fact you can apply technical analysis to other "real" data such as auto sales, employment reports and populations counts with suitable results,

And Tomas de Torquemada - head of Spanish Inquisition in 1483 said " Earth must be flat otherwise the rivers would flow out of it! Just because we cannot see the end of Earth it does not mean that it is not flat!"
 
Quote from intradaybill:

This is too old. The motion of the devices is coupled to each other when they are put on the cans. It is a coupling effect. There is nothing wired going on. After some transient motion they are suncronized.

This is what I thought too. It's only when they are put on cans they can affect each other and then they synchronize. Off the cans, no interaction, they go back to no synchronization.
 
Quote from zedDoubleNaught:

I'll try to map the concepts onto an example: I read an article that a fringe idea (like a new fad or conspiracy theory) has low adoption in the population, until it passes a threshold of 10% of the population. After it passes 10%, acceptance increases quickly. Would the threshold of 10% be an example of the "emergence of large temporal fluctuation of X(t)"? Then would the adoption rate as it went from 1%-2%-4%-10%-19%-32%-...n be the "synchrony" or "emergence of order in time"?

Possible. In order to have Sync we need to have oscillators. However, many "avalanche" or "snowball" effects are initiated via spontaneous synchronization of elements that are not visible at the first glance.
 
Quote from SunTrader:

Boris Schlossberg: "Price patterns are simply the reflection of human reactions of fear and greed to ever-changing news flow. They are not some randomly generated numbers from an Excel spreadsheet, even though they make look very similar. This is the critical flaw of pure randomness theorists - just because random functions can often mimic price patterns does not mean that price patterns themselves are random."

In fact you can apply technical analysis to other "real" data such as auto sales, employment reports and populations counts with suitable results,

+1

Pure randomness theorist commit the notorious formal fallacy of asserting the consequence. See the true implication:

Random generator -> random patterns

Then if they see a pattern in market data they assert the consequence of the previous implication and they claim it must be from a random process.

I mean is such a typical formal fallacy but again so few people study logic in depth at schools. To study logic and understand it in depth you have to got to an expensive private school. Public schools don't have time and money for that. You get what you pay for.

"Yeah, I saw Jim carrying an umbrella. It must have been raining that day".

Typical statement of a fool who attended a cheap public school.
 
Quote from MAESTRO:

And Tomas de Torquemada - head of Spanish Inquisition in 1483 said " Earth must be flat otherwise the rivers would flow out of it! Just because we cannot see the end of Earth it does not mean that it is not flat!"

What does this have to do with what SunTrader posted?
 
Quote from zedDoubleNaught:

This is what I thought too. It's only when they are put on cans they can affect each other and then they synchronize. Off the cans, no interaction, they go back to no synchronization.

I'm guessing the point of the metaphor is not that purely random processes [as random as a metronome can be, that is] will spontaneously synchronize. It's when conditions allow them to influence each other that stable patterns appear.

Much like the paradigm shift Darwin caused by positing that ordered systems can arise from chaos due to the relationships formed by their elements.
 
blahblah...chitchat...herd of PhD's discover groupthink/herding/ss of mechanical, biological (as in sororities), chaotical, feedback loop...blahblah...chitchat...blahblah...Francisco Franco...chitchat...blahblah.
Can we push forward?. Where is my cappuccino?.
 
Some common-sense responses:

It appears your initial position rests on the premise that the market is an infinitely complex system. Because an infinitely complex system is impossible to model and predict, determinism does not hold. It does not necessarily follow that randomness is the ontological basis of that system. It simply means the behaviors observed can be classified as random according to your your strict definition.

Also, it follows from your theory that all behavior, even when measured discretely, is infinitely complex -- a hypothesis that cannot be tested and has no value.

As a founding member of the Glitch Mob, intradaybill is correct in his point about affirming the consequent.
 
Quote from Samsara:

I'm guessing the point of the metaphor is not that purely random processes [as random as a metronome can be, that is] will spontaneously synchronize. It's when conditions allow them to influence each other that stable patterns appear.

Much like the paradigm shift Darwin caused by positing that ordered systems can arise from chaos due to the relationships formed by their elements.

Yes, and now I have trouble forecasting where the next step in the discussion will be. Not to disagree or object (that's not until I've heard the full positions and understand them), but it seems to me there is a contradiction or inconsistency:

Everything is random. The random parts interact and then influence each other. Then they spontaneously synchronize from that interaction to move in one direction over time. But synchronized movement over time would be a stable, somewhat predictable move, or possibly the concept of a "trend". But I don't know, maybe this process or contradiction is what we're looking for.
 
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