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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries

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To: Ilaine who wrote (35755)7/5/2003 4:01:35 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) of 74559
 
CB, given your self-professed mathematical dyxlexia, I'm surprised you are partial to partial differential equations.

Those ones seemed a load of old cobblers. My theory is that economists are wanna be mathematicians, who trundle out some mathematical stuff to give their reality-detached theories an air of credibility.

I noticed that he predicted a USA deflation in 2000 or was it 2001, starting within a year of then. So far, he's wrong. Which is not surprising given the ability of the Fed to pixelate as many dollars as they like.

When the length of an inch is shrunken by 50%, the apparent length of a piece of string doubles. It's a bit like the theory of relativity. As the rate of printing approaches the speed of light, the whole ball of string unravels and we get a Plank length singularity as big as the whole universe.

If we use the piece of string as our monetary measuring stick, things such as debts and values go awry.

Or something like that.

Mqurice
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