Quote from Gabfly1:
Psychology and other "social sciences" are nowhere near exact sciences. Since trading involves human behavior and variables which cannot always be foreseen, let alone exactly how they will be weighed by the market's participants at that particular time in conjunction with all the other variables then at play, it is not a pure, exact science. You cannot even establish a legitimate probability distribution with numeric specificity insofar as future price action is concerned. Any specificity is limited to frequency distribution of past price behavior. There can be a meaningful difference between the two for the reasons I just cited. With a true probability distribution, you can measure risk precisely. Without one, the outcome is rather more uncertain. If trading were an exact science then you should be able to predict with precision and accordingly trade quite large in relation to your account size. Do you? I would hope not, because uncertainty requires a larger margin for error than probability. I wouldn't confuse reasonable reliability over time with exactitude if I were you.
There are many viewpoints available.
The above is one.
It is unfortunate and the person(s) who operate from such a place get the consequences.
They and I are satisfied with our differences.
Recently, on LKL there was a discussion and kind of a debate on the universe and how people fit into it and the size of things.
One person, a collegague of Hawkings, finally brought up some of the limitations the participants were facing. He simply stated how important it was to not depend upon the limits of telescopes when a person could think about things beyond observation.
Why don't people think further than the above cited post? It doesn'y matter but, on the otherhand it is possible to have a noise and anomoally free view of the markets.
Why not step past the limitations pointed out by Hawkings colleague?
The reason is, and it applies to the poster above, is that it is simply not possible for such a person so to do.
After "who cares" what still remains to be considered?
For some of us it is the non probabilitistic nature of the markets. this is a place where certainty rules and it is only necessary to operate under sufficiency conditions.
In the foreseeable future better telescopes will be deployed. At present we do see as far into the expanding universe as far as the boundary where the universe is expanding beyond the speed of light. Its a monochromatic boundary as expected.
Using probability is like using a telescope to see the markets. To see where something is created out of nothing doesn't require a telescope, therefore, the telescope is set aside.
In trading, why even begin with probability when it is not required?
A person can glance back through history and see the famous operating and that probability was not even considered. At some point the tools that extended human reach did come into being, however.
The telescope allowed mankind to go as far as possible. We see the light coming back from the boundary where the expansion of the universe is at the speed of light.
As a person looks into the limits of the market, he finds that the probability tool is not part of the examination. Certainty, in the absence of noise and anomalies prevails.
We were all lucky we did not have to use probabilistic theory or continuous functions part of mathematics.
Science is what is required to examine the markets. If a person discovers the pieces that make up the market, then why can't he put the pieces together.
Look at the periodic table for a few moments. Is there noise or anomalies? Do you know how the ingredients of an egg become the ingredients of a chick? No, how could you? An egg and a chick have different ingredients.
Why is there no connection between the market's offer and probability?
How IS the Scientific Method used to examine the market? For sure, it is NOT done with probabilistic information theory. Exact science is done.