Quote from marketsurfer:
what you see is the past, you trade your thoughts on the future ( what you think) based on how you interpret the past. hope this makes sense.
best,
surfer
) because I am rather heteroclit - I have made 3 schools in biological engineering, petroleum engineering, production and quality management, I have been quality and production engineer then software architect engineer and my interests are in Astrophysic, Neurobiology and Finance and economy - I have been obliged to learn new things so that I have now acquired a sort of framework of learning.
.Quote from marketsurfer:
thank you, harry. i will check the book out.
best,
surfer
Quote from Threei:
"Every argument eventually becomes an argument about definitions" (don't remember who).
Seems to me it became pure sholastic: as soon as all agreed on definitions, the rest became non-issue
How about this, for argument sake: trade is entered and managed with no bias whatsoever, just because there is valid setup? You can say that setup itself was formed at earlier time on some research that leads to bias, i.e.: this type of breakout usually leads to upward movement. Right, but the imperative word is USUALLY, not ALWAYS, which means: this setup could work or not in ANY GIVEN case. Thus, knowing that in a long run trading this setup is going to make money for me, I don't know which trade on this setup is going to be a winner and which a loss. Hence, I simply react on valid signal and let the market to prove me right or wrong. No bias, pure trading what I see. No thinking involved. Eyes to finger. Robot-like.![]()
Quote from candletrader:
... it could just be our different way with words, boiling down to fundamentally the same thing... its actually possible to argue it both ways i.e. in trading what you see, you are inherently, and a priori, trading what you think, given that trading what you see must be based on some methodological rationale... so it is of course possible that what differentiates [...] opinions is mere semantics...
.Quote from Threei:
As candletrader says, need to agree on definitions first since this slogan might mean different things for different traders... As known promoter of Trade what you see, not what you think, I would like to offer my definition.
To me, trading what you think means holding onto one's opinion despite what market action tells him. Trading what you see means admitting the market reality. Let me illustrate: he who trades what he thinks will be holding the stock of the company that announced cancer cure sold in China over Internet wirelessly with Linux based server, Pokemon logo embedded on the box (those who lived through manias of 1999 smile here, others shrug). He is going to hold because China is huge market, and cancer cure is so hot and... and... Stock will go lower, breaking support after support, and he will be still holding - because he THINKS it's going to work eventually, sellers are wrong, manipulators shake out weak hands, etc etc. He who trades what he sees is going to take his stop because what he sees is: stock is weak, support is broken, his stop is hit, the rest is just words - market reality tells him a trade is not working, end of story.
This is the meaning I put in this slogan.
Quote from harrytrader:
So here the paradox could come from the fact that one doesn't distinguish two phases : the phase of static analysis and the phase of dynamic analysis. This is classical in Chess and in mechanics and it should be also obvious in trading. Depending on style of trading static or dynamic analysis would have more or less importance but the two should exist in equilibrium and if one has some difficulty with trading one should think about dividing the two: conquer by dividing is also a strategy in thinking process.
