Difference between revisions of "Gauge Theory of Economics"

From The Portal Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Added annotations.)
Line 10: Line 10:
* Stanford University: Systems Architecture, Kabuki Capitalism, and the Economic Manhattan Project — https://youtu.be/4_brHQRMu9k
* Stanford University: Systems Architecture, Kabuki Capitalism, and the Economic Manhattan Project — https://youtu.be/4_brHQRMu9k
* [https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/eb74/898337415912a12d5b6642e5c2e6950f637c.pdf The Index Number Problem:  A Differential Geometric Approach]- by Pia Malaney, his wife.
* [https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/eb74/898337415912a12d5b6642e5c2e6950f637c.pdf The Index Number Problem:  A Differential Geometric Approach]- by Pia Malaney, his wife.
{{stub}}
[[Category:Concepts]]

Revision as of 01:14, 10 February 2020

Gauge theory is all you need to break out of the economics flatland. The following is an equation that Eric Weinstein talked about. We are going to break it down together and picture the meaning of each part in a geometrical and intuitive way. The results of this work will be interesting for the present economics community.

$$q = \frac{ {p_0}\cdot{q} }{ {p_0}\cdot{q_0} } q_0 + (q - \frac{ {p_0}\cdot{q} }{ {p_0}\cdot{q_0} } q_0)$$

where we label the first term as Reference Basket and the second one as Barter.

Supplemental materials

MW-Icon-Warning.png This article is a stub. You can help us by editing this page and expanding it.