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32 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Murky, July 4, 2004
Fibonacci lived in the Renaissance, and Elliot in the 1930's. One would think that a writer could do a decent job of explaining their theories by now, or at least, for a $60 retail price tag, hire an editor or professional writer to make his observations comprehensible.This work suffers from a lack of both. After a long bit of hocus-pocus about Fibonacci numbers (complete with nautilis pictures and sunflowers), the author launches into Elliot wave analysis, gives a lot of assorted details about it, and then attempts to show how the amplitude and time of waves might or might not correspond to Fibonacci numbers. It is hard to say why a bad book is bad. Fisher starts by not really stating what Elliot's principles were -- the reader comes into the middle of a movie. He then begins talking at random about exceptions and special cases, unfortunately interspersed with just the wrong information. He shows Finbonacci spirals imposed on stock charts with inadequate explanation of how they are created, how they might be used *if* they work, and no fathomable discussion of the intersections (and non-intersections) of the stock chart with the spiral. I started life as a math major at a prominent university, and I can tell a good practical mathematics text when I see one. This is not one. It is a poorly organized hodgepodge of ideas, often inadequately explained. The book is one third the length of what it should be to cover this material, and what is there is, is not very well done. Read something else, whether you are looking for an introduction or an advanced treatise.
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