Quantum Economics
anonymous
September 21 2005, 03:47:59 UTC
Fare,
I enjoyed your piece on Quantum Economics. I have been looking int this are myself now. This “transactional view” can be expressed simply in trading terms. We can say we know the value of an asset only at the time it is quoted, and the quote itself is a function of expected future valuations, which is dependent, in part, if the transaction is executed (or not) at that price. George Soros has commented on this as well...“The prevailing wisdom holds that markets tend toward equilibrium--i.e., a price at which willing buyers and sellers balance each other out. That may be true of the market in widgets, but it is emphatically not true of financial markets. In financial markets a balance is difficult to reach because financial markets do not deal with known quantities; they try to discount a future that is contingent on how they discount it at present.” . This is certainly something worthy of more research. Regards - Martin
Re: Quantum Economics
anonymous
February 3 2007, 02:51:56 UTC
One of the most amazing characteristics of our ilussion for continuity, from which we can rarely escape, is that our possibility to visualize life as non continuously isolated events always contains an ego-quantification element which agregates information being registered in real time to the information already been storaged or accumulated. So, ¿Is it possible to be free of it in order to participate in the interaction without being distorted by the accumulative aparatous?
Re; Govt and economicsanastasouJanuary 10 2011, 18:11:08 UTC
Dude it has nothing with socialism-socialism is about providing for people-usually poor people. Inefficient businesses milking off government money is called "corruption" and "feudalism" when the powerful and the government have a cozy relationship under the pretence of the "too-big-to-fail" policy and succumbing to various group pressures e.g. farmers who are also voters. The small and medium businesses are either too weak as unions and in many countries too few to count enough votes but yes growth and innovation usually takes place in smaller companies until they are poached by big companies hence small and medium businesses fight for themselves and constitute genuine capitalism.
Comments 5
I enjoyed your piece on Quantum Economics. I have been looking int this are myself now. This “transactional view” can be expressed simply in trading terms. We can say we know the value of an asset only at the time it is quoted, and the quote itself is a function of expected future valuations, which is dependent, in part, if the transaction is executed (or not) at that price. George Soros has commented on this as well...“The prevailing wisdom holds that markets tend toward equilibrium--i.e., a price at which willing buyers and sellers balance each other out. That may be true of the market in widgets, but it is emphatically not true of financial markets. In financial markets a balance is difficult to reach because financial markets do not deal with known quantities; they try to discount a future that is contingent on how they discount it at present.” . This is certainly something worthy of more research.
Regards - Martin
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