There is importance in looking closely at the things we study. There is an old parable from Samuel Scudder called "Look at your fish". The story can best be described in "The Student, the Fish, and Agassiz," a 19th-century educational parable in which Harvard professor Louis Agassiz forces a student to study a dead fish for days, using only observation and sketching, to teach that true knowledge comes from intense, firsthand examination. It emphasizes finding "general laws" through detail.
The same process can be applied to markets. We can start with price charts. Look at your charts. Look at the prices, but just don't look once; look deeply into what the markets may be saying. Then, after looking at the prices, look at the news surrounding the prices. This does not mean that everything has to have a pattern, but for any analysis, the first order of business is looking at the data.
See before starting to analyze.

No comments:
Post a Comment