As we all know, it is very difficult to change the long established habits that were inculcated in us when we were quite young. People will fight to defend old maps and old symbols, regardless of whether those maps actually represent any territory here and now, and regardless of whether they ever did represent just what we were told they represented.
Even when people take their map and go to the territory and compare them and note the changes or corrections the map needs, they will still cling to the old map, so much so that even when these realities have demonstrably changed, or are provably different from the "map", they still tend to deny the external reality and assert the "truth" of the map.
Is it any wonder then that there are contradictions among the views of various . . . market analysts, if they are each clinging to a simple all-out view and for all practical purposes ignore anything that does not support the view they hold already? There are no contradictions in reality, you know. If we can just look away from the high abstraction long enough to see the facts, we find no contradiction.
If we value the map more than the reality, we must not be surprised to find that the reality doesn't always fit the map. In such a case, the reasonable man will change his map, not try to explain away the facts.
-- John Magee
Even when people take their map and go to the territory and compare them and note the changes or corrections the map needs, they will still cling to the old map, so much so that even when these realities have demonstrably changed, or are provably different from the "map", they still tend to deny the external reality and assert the "truth" of the map.
Is it any wonder then that there are contradictions among the views of various . . . market analysts, if they are each clinging to a simple all-out view and for all practical purposes ignore anything that does not support the view they hold already? There are no contradictions in reality, you know. If we can just look away from the high abstraction long enough to see the facts, we find no contradiction.
If we value the map more than the reality, we must not be surprised to find that the reality doesn't always fit the map. In such a case, the reasonable man will change his map, not try to explain away the facts.
-- John Magee