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===Backtesting, how how “hindsight is a wonderful thing”===
===Backtesting, how how “hindsight is a wonderful thing”===
[[Backtesting]] is the most naked way of trying to solve for the ''future'' by extrapolating from the past.  
[[Backtesting]] is a naked way of trying to solve for the ''future'' by extrapolating from the past.  


It is ''so'' naked that only the genuinely dense or mendacious have any truck with it.
It is ''so'' naked that these days only the mendacious or the dense have any truck with it. Of course, the mendacious and dense tend to get on pretty well.


We collect and analyse 5 years of market data and from it construct the optimal trading strategy, that, had we used it, would have returned the greatest profit.
The idea is this: collect and analyse years of market data — back through the last meltdown, ideally — and from it construct the optimal trading strategy, that, had one used it, would have returned the greatest profit, and have totally avoided the fallout of that meltdown.


Of course we didn't know at the time how the data would turn out, so didn't know no to use the optimal strategy. Had we known, and had we adopted the strategy, others would have too, trading patterns would have been different, the data would have come out differently, thereby confounding the strategy. Backtesting is a preposterous idea.
Of course no-one knew at the time how the meltdown would play out, so no-one used this brilliant strategy.<ref>Well, the odds are ''some'' bastard did, but not by design and not because he had any special knowledge or insight. He just happened to have his money on the horse that came in. In a random walk, among a big enough stable of runners and riders, ''someone'' will back the horse that wins.</ref> For had we known trading patterns would have been different, the data would have come out differently, thereby confounding the strategy.  


By the lights of history, the market’s course is now fixed whereas when you are there in the moment, it is not. It reacts to you, just as you react to it. It is dynamic. Contingent. Alive. There are unlimited possibilities. A trading strategy derived from its fossil remains is similarly inert  Dead. Unable to participate in the symbiosis between market and participant.
[[Backtesting]] is a preposterous idea.


This is true of any algorithm that depends on data. Data is a fossil record. Good for answering questions to which there already is an answer. (You shouldn't scoff at this: many of our best questions are things for which there is already an answer; just one we don't personally know. Hence: the value of Google. The value of a ''library''.
By the lights of history, the market’s course is now fixed. The data is dead. Inert. But when you are ''there'', in the moment, it is ''not''. It reacts to you, and you react to it. It is dynamic. Symbiotic. Contingent. Alive. 


But note the mode of discovery: static; historical; final; determinate.
A trading strategy derived from the fossil record of data that was once alive, but is now not, is similarly inert. It is cannot ride, or get swamped by, the symbiosis between market and participant. 
 
This is true of any [[algorithm]] that depends on data. Data is history. A photograph. It is good for answering questions to which there already is an answer. (Don’t scoff at this: many good questions are things for which there is already an answer; just one we don’t personally know. Hence: the value of Google. The value of a ''library''.)
 
But note the mode of discovery: static; historical; final; determinate. Data can tell you how things ''were''.
===Causal [[determinism]]===
===Causal [[determinism]]===
Iteration lies behind our obsession with the power of Amazon butterflies to set off hurricanes in the Philippines.
We accept “causal [[determinism|regularity]]” — that science yields truth: that one thing regularly leads to another — because the alternative seems to deny the apparent operation of the universe.  


We accept causal [[determinism]] because the alternative seems to deny the apparent regularity of the universe. But still, even the fossil record flatters to deceive: the lattice of potential causes is far more complex than we our wildest dreams — we form our dreams from what we see and what we hear and that necessarily infinitesimal. The histories we construct are works of imaginative fiction. (This is why historians do not agree). We make them; we do not ''find'' them.
But even here the fossil record flatters to deceive: the lattice of potential causes is far more complex than our wildest dreams — we form those just from what we see and hear — but that is an infinitesimal sliver of all possible events out there. Our histories are works of imaginative fiction. This is why historians do not agree. We make our histories; we do not ''find'' them.


By looking at a unitary history (that we made up), in hindsight we miss the contingency from which it was fashioned. Once it is laid down, it looks as if it was inevitable. It looks to be immutable of operating causes. It looks pre-ordained. This is a curiously ''religious'' idea.
By looking at a unitary history (that we made up), in hindsight we miss the contingency from which it was fashioned. Once it is laid down, it looks inevitable. It looks pre-ordained. This is a curiously ''religious'' idea.


In any case, if we accept the proposition that there is but one past (whether or not we can never be sure what it is) still there remains, from any given present, an ''infinity'' of futures.
In any case, even if there is but one past whether or not we can know it still there remains, from any given present, an ''infinity'' of futures.


The temptation of looking at our concrete past, is to see a single decision, at any point on that timeline as having determined the remaining history to the present. The extrapolation is that it will determine future also, unless a counterweighting single decision of equal significance can be made.
The temptation, when we look at such a concrete past, is to see each of the points behind us on that timeline as having determined the remaining history to the present. The extrapolation is that they must determine the future, too. The further back in time a point is, the more momentous it has been in determining our path to here. This seems intuitive: the decisions I made ''yesterday'' had little bearing on where I am today: I was already here. The die was long since cast.


But neither is true. We have, and our ancestors had, the ongoing ability to change things  daily by the decisions they, and we, made. ''Everyone'' makes some bad decisions. The key is not to be ''defined'' by them. Everyonevmakes good decisions too we have good luck, and bad luck.
But this is not true.   


Our permanent aspiration: from here, make more ''good'' decisions than you do bad ones. Improve your ratio.  
Since that moment thirty-years ago, when you bought that plane ticket to America, you have had thousands of opportunities to  buy a plane ticket home again. That you are still in America is nothing to do with that ticket you bought, and everything to do with the tickets home you haven’t bought since.  


You can’t undo the decisions of the past, whether made by you or about you, or by your ancestors or about them.
We have, and our ancestors had, the ongoing ability to change things daily. ''Everyone'' makes bad decisions. The key is not to be ''defined'' by them. Everyone makes ''good'' decisions, too. Keep the good decisions, do what you can to correct for the bad ones.  


So, serenity’s prayer: have the courage to fix the things you can do, being those in the present live.com and up for debate; and the patience 2 2 to bear those things you cannot, and the wisdom to know the difference.  
Our permanent aspiration: from here, make more ''good'' decisions than you do bad ones. Improve your ratio. You will not always know at the time. You will learn in hindsight. ''Iterate''.  


You cannot influence all matters and present Colleen some wisdom is required. That little wisdom is needed to know you cannot change the past.  
You can’t undo the decisions of the past, whether made by you or about you, or by your ancestors or about them. ''You can make different decisions now''.


The best you can do is change the stories you tell yourself,and others, about it.
===Pragmatist’s prayer and the infinite game===
[[Finite and Infinite Games|Finite and infinite games]] is, as ever, a great [[metaphor]] for framing these battles of the past and present. For what is a “[[lived experience]]”, a “[[grievance]]” or a “[[standpoint]]”, if not an articulation of ''history''?


===Pragmatist’s prayer and the [[infinite game]]===
The future contains ''unlived'' experiences. There ''are'' no ''grievances''. Our standpoints, the margins and their intersections are ''unknown''.
Finite and infinite games is, as ever, handy metaphor for framing these battles of the past and present. For what is a “lived experience”,  a “grievance” or a “standpoint”, if not an articulations of ''history''? The future contains unlived experiences. There are no grievances. Our standpoints, the margins and their intersections are unknown.


Being historical, a lived experience is permanent, and set it stone. It cannot be moved. It cannot be removed. It cannot be compensated for. It cannot be denied. It becomes a monument. A shibboleth. A sacred prophecy. But it is our imaginative construction. We choose our significant events. We build our own memorials. We choose to live beneath their shadows. But our present is a function of every point in the past, not just the ones it's suits us to settle on.
Being historical, a lived experience is permanent, and set it stone. It cannot be moved. It cannot be removed. It cannot be compensated for. It cannot be denied. It becomes a monument. A shibboleth. A sacred prophecy. But it is our imaginative construction. We choose our significant events. We build our own memorials. We choose to live beneath their shadows. But our present is a function of every point in the past, not just the ones it's suits us to settle on.

Revision as of 09:15, 24 January 2023

The JC’S favourite Big Ideas™


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Path-dependent
/pɑːθ-dɪˈpɛndənt/ (adj.)

Of a circumstance, that its coming about can only be explained by the sequence of events and contributing factors that lead to it; that it cannot be justified or explained by reference only to existing conditions.

The way things turned out depended on the coincidental interaction and juxtaposition of unrelated factors in the ecosystem.

The classic case is of course evolution by natural selection: re run the tape from the beginning and you would not get the same result.

Backtesting, how how “hindsight is a wonderful thing”

Backtesting is a naked way of trying to solve for the future by extrapolating from the past.

It is so naked that these days only the mendacious or the dense have any truck with it. Of course, the mendacious and dense tend to get on pretty well.

The idea is this: collect and analyse years of market data — back through the last meltdown, ideally — and from it construct the optimal trading strategy, that, had one used it, would have returned the greatest profit, and have totally avoided the fallout of that meltdown.

Of course no-one knew at the time how the meltdown would play out, so no-one used this brilliant strategy.[1] For had we known trading patterns would have been different, the data would have come out differently, thereby confounding the strategy.

Backtesting is a preposterous idea.

By the lights of history, the market’s course is now fixed. The data is dead. Inert. But when you are there, in the moment, it is not. It reacts to you, and you react to it. It is dynamic. Symbiotic. Contingent. Alive.

A trading strategy derived from the fossil record of data that was once alive, but is now not, is similarly inert. It is cannot ride, or get swamped by, the symbiosis between market and participant.

This is true of any algorithm that depends on data. Data is history. A photograph. It is good for answering questions to which there already is an answer. (Don’t scoff at this: many good questions are things for which there is already an answer; just one we don’t personally know. Hence: the value of Google. The value of a library.)

But note the mode of discovery: static; historical; final; determinate. Data can tell you how things were.

Causal determinism

We accept “causal regularity” — that science yields truth: that one thing regularly leads to another — because the alternative seems to deny the apparent operation of the universe.

But even here the fossil record flatters to deceive: the lattice of potential causes is far more complex than our wildest dreams — we form those just from what we see and hear — but that is an infinitesimal sliver of all possible events out there. Our histories are works of imaginative fiction. This is why historians do not agree. We make our histories; we do not find them.

By looking at a unitary history (that we made up), in hindsight we miss the contingency from which it was fashioned. Once it is laid down, it looks inevitable. It looks pre-ordained. This is a curiously religious idea.

In any case, even if there is but one past — whether or not we can know it — still there remains, from any given present, an infinity of futures.

The temptation, when we look at such a concrete past, is to see each of the points behind us on that timeline as having determined the remaining history to the present. The extrapolation is that they must determine the future, too. The further back in time a point is, the more momentous it has been in determining our path to here. This seems intuitive: the decisions I made yesterday had little bearing on where I am today: I was already here. The die was long since cast.

But this is not true.

Since that moment thirty-years ago, when you bought that plane ticket to America, you have had thousands of opportunities to buy a plane ticket home again. That you are still in America is nothing to do with that ticket you bought, and everything to do with the tickets home you haven’t bought since.

We have, and our ancestors had, the ongoing ability to change things daily. Everyone makes bad decisions. The key is not to be defined by them. Everyone makes good decisions, too. Keep the good decisions, do what you can to correct for the bad ones.

Our permanent aspiration: from here, make more good decisions than you do bad ones. Improve your ratio. You will not always know at the time. You will learn in hindsight. Iterate.

You can’t undo the decisions of the past, whether made by you or about you, or by your ancestors or about them. You can make different decisions now.

Pragmatist’s prayer and the infinite game

Finite and infinite games is, as ever, a great metaphor for framing these battles of the past and present. For what is a “lived experience”, a “grievance” or a “standpoint”, if not an articulation of history?

The future contains unlived experiences. There are no grievances. Our standpoints, the margins and their intersections are unknown.

Being historical, a lived experience is permanent, and set it stone. It cannot be moved. It cannot be removed. It cannot be compensated for. It cannot be denied. It becomes a monument. A shibboleth. A sacred prophecy. But it is our imaginative construction. We choose our significant events. We build our own memorials. We choose to live beneath their shadows. But our present is a function of every point in the past, not just the ones it's suits us to settle on.

This is the empathetic stance. To adopt a historical narrative: to step into its shoes, to take sides, to exalt it and perpetuate its grievance.

But, look: standpoints iterate. As the present moves through spacetime, we lay down the tracks of future, each new decision we make contributes to our lived experience. We update our standpoints. The decisions of the past for all further away in time and significance. It is an inverse square.

The infinite game counsels us to look at where we are, see what we’ve got and make the best of it. It focuses on the decisions of the now and the possibilities of the future. It regards the past as informational and instructive, not constraining. If I once hit my thumb with a hammer, I know to be careful next time I have a hammer. It does not make me forever a victim of hammer abuse.

The past as a formal system

Not also the idea that the past is a single formal causal chain, that we know about, is is a classic example of legibility in the sense articulated by James c Scott in seeing like a state. Articulation of history is necessarily a simplification, and model, a boiling down of an infinity of information into a single digestible narrative. It necessarily Mrs please in the same way that informal systems and interactions are are critical to the operation of a state or a business so are informal, unobserved, and noticed interactions.

Not only is “the past” —as we articulate it — inert and immutable, it's not even true. We can adjust it and do adjusted by nearly changing our account of it. This is the orwellian concept Colin Wright and rewrite and erase our history whilst insisting on its utter continuity. The true history of the universe is immutable. The stories we tell ourselves about it are not.

See also

  1. Well, the odds are some bastard did, but not by design and not because he had any special knowledge or insight. He just happened to have his money on the horse that came in. In a random walk, among a big enough stable of runners and riders, someone will back the horse that wins.