We act on partial understanding. Our actions move prices, alter incentives, change balance sheets, affect policy pressure, and reshape the reality we were trying to understand.
Most traders want conviction because uncertainty feels like weakness. Soros begins somewhere else. He begins with fallibility. Not as a polite disclaimer. Not as intellectual humility performed for an audience. Not as the kind of sentence people say before defending their view as if the market had insulted their bloodline. Fallibility, in Soros's framework, is more radical than that. It means our understanding of reality is always incomplete, and in markets that incompleteness does not remain safely inside the mind. We act on partial understanding. Our actions move prices, alter incentives, change balance sheets, affect policy pressure, and reshape the reality we were trying to understand. That is why fallibility is not merely a philosophical idea. It is a market mechanism. Soros once wrote that his philosophy could be summarized as "a belief in our own fallibility." That sentence looks simple until you put it inside financial markets. Once money is attached to belief, error does not stay abstract. It becomes a position, a flow, a margin requirement, a lending decision, a valuation, a career constraint. A wrong idea can lose money. A wrong idea with funding can mo
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