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Or do what the Turtles did, but take it up a notch. Give the exact same system to a few thousand people, sit back and watch as some make it profitable and others make it fail. The returns will form a nice bell curve. Interview those at each tail of the curve and you'll see what's happening. It won't have anything to do with discipline, education or market knowledge. It will be so-called 'random' events that make the difference. These 'random' events, whether helpful or harmful, will be related to an individual's core beliefs.
Your conclusion cannot be true.
The Turtle experiment resulted in a number of the group breaking the rules. A breach of discipline. Had they all traded 100% to the rules, then allowing for slippage in execution, their results would have been the same.
Random events in this context are extrinsic to the individual. Thus must affect the entire group.
An intrinsic variation [random event] in a failure to execute to instructions, is a breach of discipline. The reason that they breached instructions may well be that they did not 'believe' but that is irrelevant to the question in this case: their belief or disbelief, had no direct impact on the profitability of the system [or not as the case maybe]. Their belief was that they could out-trade the system. This was proven to be false.
jog on
duc