Quote from jack hershey:
As most know, part of my life, I was an academic and I passed the survival test.
during my academic life I ran two of the five divisions of the UCSC. I also began to work at EOP and gradually shifted from one to the other.
My corporate career began as I left the political scene.
At the beginning of my work career (5 years); I was an innovator at WECO and thus while in grad school was made an MTS at BTL. This usually takes three years of BTL employment but since I was contributing significant contributions the powers that be skipped most formalities.
I had only one full time job after schooling at IBM. There, the ink I chose for publications and covers was Kotex Blue and you probably know the rest of the story. Machine grey became blue when mainframes became modern and transister oriented. If you are from Tech you know the Ida Green building and the Ida Green 29 department full graduate fellowship. My second wife was a magna cum laude in first Prniceton graduating class and shee later became the Ida Green fellow at Tech when she went to get her professional degree. She was the wife (and secretary of) of the founder of TI; IBM gave TI their transistor production line and I had tech responsibility for the information thereto.
Now I am going to explain to you how thinking and proving theories works.
The Financial Industry has it wrong. C plus history majors from the Ivy League run the FI by heritage of wealth and no brains and alcoholic parenting.
Theory can be obtained by either deduction or induction.
From theory, pragmatic applications are made.
I use PEP and three applications: PVT, SCT and SSR.
CW follows theories derived from induction. They are created using high powered statistics taken from market operations. If you are educated, you know this does not work.
The proof is as follows. The financial industry makes it money from fees and commissiions related to sales to get capital in house. Additionally, in science induction is never used to figure out how things work in theory or in practice.
So I turned away from the ways of the financial industry IMMEDIATELY upon learning on day one how prices moved from left to right and vice versa.
I deduced PEP (Pool Extraction Paradigm.) using Keynes' Paradigm Theory and the Logic Theory of Carnap.
The nature of markets DICTATES the mathematics which must be used.
Algebra must be used and the Algebra has a one on one relatiionship to the numbering system of the subject at hand, the markets.
Market owners make rules. The rules dictate the mathematics.
I, as an educated person, had to avail myself to use what I knew about Science and Mathematics.
There are two "in kind" hypothesis found in markets and they totally cover the market operation. they happen to be orthogonal. The measure of each aspect of each hypothesis boils down to one class of measurement and those measurements (PM's) can only be used in on type of mathematics for that system of numeration.
In 1848, George Boole, invented that algebra.
It is the maths I had to use in the one job I had after graduating college.
The HS dictates that velocity is what is measured as the PM.
So I use velocity as a vector in Boolean algebra to do what I do.
The financial industry does not do this.
The HS is deceptive in its dictates. If a person is not careful , he falls into the trap of relating things to time.
And it is important to realize that Boolean algebra does not use a system of numeration that is "continuous' as does an algrebra related to the base ten where two types of numbers can occur (rational, irrational and imaginary).
What happened to most people is that they never learned to think critically and do problem solving with scientific tools. I did though.
You can see the one pagers for PVT and SCT. There probably will never be an anymore elegant solution to huge problems than these two sheets of paper. And there is an absolute guarantee that they appear as a foreign language to the ignorant