Quote from Jerry030:
I would agree, adding that any technology sufficiently advanced appears as magic or as impossibility to those who lack an understanding of it. Einstein made this point around the time traditional physicists were scoffing at his new and unproven theories.
Perhaps this debate on are market randomness has a similar division. Some take a definition of random and attempt to find ways that the market matches that definition and assume this proves something about the market. It only proves that given enough motivation one can find arguments to support any proposition in most domains.
Take the argument over say the surge in Iraq. Are large bombings down? - Yes. So is it the solution for that mess? If you just count bombings you have to say yes. Are the forces that control the Iraq government using it to build a stable government that addresses the religious divisions that are hundreds of years old?...No. So short of keeping US forces there for 100 or 500 years to suppress the civil war, will the surge bring peace and democracy? Unknown, but I wouldn't invest in it.
A suggestion: for a moment letâs abandon theoretical arguments on what the market is.
Instead will those who advocate a random nature state a practical measure which if exceeded would cause them to question their position? Those with a non-random perspective can do the same.
Random guys might say:
A Profit Factor greater than X for at least Y trades over Z bars would call into question the random theory.
Non-Random guys can counter:
Fine, here is an approach that exceeds those numbers.
Thus we go from theoretical debate to a "boots on the ground" actuality.
Jerry030
this is sort of twisting reality.
the definition of market order is ALWAYS based on the individuals viewpoint. " i can see the order" " i can profit from seeing the order" and obviously " the order, that i and only i see, allows me to profit"
the randomness crowd looks at the market from a detached viewpoint generally-- the market as a whole, not individually based.
it's the SUBJECTIVE v. OBJECTIVE dilemma----- the subjective seeing of order is meaningless to the objective observer.
and NO your profit from thinking you see order thereby predicting the market--- has no bearing on the subject. you're the outlier to the whole.
surf