Edgar E. Peters's latest book, Patterns in the Dark: Understanding Risk and Financial Crisis with Complexity Theory is not merely an autobiographical indulgence. The bulk of the book is Peters's lucent analysis expounding on the need for uncertainty. Whether he uses the example of genetic algorithms to show how randomness can lead a process to a goal even when the ultimate path is unknown, or if he simply shows how David Bowie's creation of Ziggie Stardust illustrates the integration of two seemingly contrary elements in the creative process (with a nod toward uncertainty as a requirement for stability), Peters's always seems to provide compelling insight into how global structure and local randomness interact.
Edgar E. Peters's latest book, Patterns in the Dark: Understanding Risk and Financial Crisis with Complexity Theory is not merely an autobiographical indulgence. The bulk of the book is Peters's lucent analysis expounding on the need for uncertainty. Whether he uses the example of genetic algorithms to show how randomness can lead a process to a goal even when the ultimate path is unknown, or if he simply shows how David Bowie's creation of Ziggie Stardust illustrates the integration of two seemingly contrary elements in the creative process (with a nod toward uncertainty as a requirement for stability), Peters's always seems to provide compelling insight into how global structure and local randomness interact.
Ultimately, the book's implications for "global structure" policymakers are more clear than any prescriptions that might be handed down to individual investors acting in an environment of local randomness. However, the discussions regarding various process models and their implications for economic activity are worth the price of admission alone. Interested investors ought to check it out.--("Fool On The Hill - An Investment Opinion" by Alex Schay - June 1999)
Patterns in the Dark is that rare book that offers an entirely new perspective on an issue of ongoing concern to investors: the unpredictability of financial markets. In this groundbreaking work, leading investment strategist and authority on chaos theory Edgar
Peters makes accessible ways of understanding market behavior that--until now--were
known only to specialists. In a lucid and engaging style, Peters explains how processes
with a large number of independent agents, such as free markets, can spontaneously
organize themselves into a coherent system. He draws on the work of the Austrian school
of economics and complexity theory to show how free markets are by their nature
continually evolving complex systems that require uncertainty to operate successfully.
Using everyday examples, Peters shows how complex systems use uncertainty to adapt to
changes in their environment and to absorb unexpected shocks. As proof, he cites
instructive examples of how rash or heavy-handed attempts to eliminate uncertainty in
markets have invariably led to disaster. Patterns in the Dark draws on a broad range of
human knowledge and experience to clarify the behavior of a system that now operates on
a global, 24-hour, and thoroughly interconnected basis. Peters illuminates the complex
operation of the marketplace by including keen observations drawn from science,
mathematics, and artistic creation as well as economics. His models include the social
vision of the Austrian economists, Darwinian ideas of evolution, the laws of physics, and
the creative risks of the artist. His meditations on financial markets weigh the effects of
limitations vs. rules, risk vs. uncertainty, and order vs. chaos. As a guide to a world
marketplace that has become increasingly complex anti uncertain, Patterns in the Dark
offers the investor a rich source of insight, illumination, and wisdom.