china white said:
Think of an Enlightened Pedestrian who knows where the valves are in the engine and what a horsepower means - he is still a pedestrian, not a motorist
That is a really useful observation my old China. And one which has led me down a number of interesting mental avenues, the wrong way up a dendrite or two and into more than few axon terminals.
An expert motorist doesn't need to know a thing about mechanics, engines, the internal combustion process, gears - anything at all in fact about the workings of a car. He/she doesn't
need to. But how likely is that someone who is an expert motorist would not know a reasonable amount about the underlying processes which facilitate their excellence? And do they learn this before or after they achieve excellence? And does it matter? A genuine question, not rhetorical at all.
And if you don't need to know about these things to be an expert driver, what do you need?
Spatial awareness, good reflexes, rapid forward analysis of probabilities (playground, built-up area approaching, non-working traffic lights), knowledge and experience of the car, road conditions and other traffic. And a destination would be useful too...
There are more aspects I'm sure, but as a quick top-of-my-head exercise, it'll do for now. These are things you need to be an expert motorist.
You don't need and in-depth awareness of the oil-refinery business, state-of-the-art knowledge in metallurgy or a degree in engineering.
I didn't want to push your point too far and analogise it further with respect to the process of being/becoming an excellent trader, but my t2w-persona insists.
What do most traders believe are the vital, core components of their trading success?
Very few will say it's their personal knowledge of 'the market' or one particular stock or another (although some do specialise of course). And few will claim TA or FA do the job for them. Rather more wil claim knowledge of other traders psychological responses are the key factor. But by far the greatest number of traders (successful ones I have read about, spoken to etc) have no doubt that their own personality is solely responsible for their success. The simplicity of their approach, system etc. is usually a surprise. It's their focus, discipline, confidence and...that something else.
I am a successful trader. And I know a great deal about the markets. About TA and FA. I've studied various instruments and methodologies and strategies and systems. I took the time to get an advanced degree in Psychology (not for trading purposes, but who knows?). In those 8 years I've only recently recognised what it was that has made me successful. Primarily because it is only recently that I became successful!
So why am I saying all this? Simply because your comment about pedestrians and motorists pretty much encapsulates what it's all about. Most newbie traders (and I was one for over 7 years) learn all the wrong things in thinking about what they might need to trade the markets. I now know what is required. But I'm not sure I didn't have to 'know' all those other things first in order to trade successfully. And what I do know about the key factor in becoming successful (probably many keys, who knows that either?) is almost ineffable.
Which is also why Socrates, I believe, has to approach this topic from such an oblique angle. Just like a shuttle (successfully) reentering the Earth's atmosphere - it has to approach at just the right angle. Too steep - it'll burn up. Too shallow, it'll bounce off and (potentially) be lost forever.
If this thread is doing anything (and I personally think it is doing a great deal) it is pointing traders in the direction they need to be looking. The real irony is, those who would most benefit from understanding what's going on here are the least likely to be interested in the subject matter. It's taking too long. It's going in the wrong direction. It's not where the action is.
Like I said at the beginning of this post, China's comment has had my top deck quite busy this afternoon, when I should have been out enjoying this fine weather.
China, if I've hi-jacked your point with my own analogy I'm sure you wont mind. And if anyone can think of a way to turn China's analogy into something a newbie would (a) understand and (b) be interested in, we could bung it in 'first steps' and save an awful lot of people and awful lot of time and money.