Feynman never stuck to ready-made answers. His key point is — the quality of the questions you ask.
Most people ask: "Why is this coin rising?" Experts ask: "How are market participants' psychological expectations changing, how is the liquidity structure evolving, what do on-chain data reflect?"
A seemingly simple shift in perspective on questions can completely reshape your understanding of the market. Low-quality question frameworks can trap your thinking, while precise question formulation can open up new perspectives. That’s why some people look at the same data but draw completely different conclusions.
Next time you do research or make trading decisions, ask yourself: Are my questions deep enough?
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RuntimeError
· 5h ago
To be honest, asking good questions can indeed change the entire way of thinking, but the key is how many people truly want to think deeply? Most just want quick answers.
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SignatureDenied
· 5h ago
Really, the problem framework determines the ceiling. Most people are still asking "rise and fall," while smart people are already dissecting psychological expectations and liquidity.
Can chain data lie? But asking the wrong questions definitely will.
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LeverageAddict
· 5h ago
Really, the problem framework determines the ceiling. Most retail investors haven't even considered this layer.
Asking the right questions is a hundred times harder than finding the answers.
I've looked into on-chain data before, and it really depends on the scenario; not all tokens are equally useful.
I remember a few days ago, an older brother in the group was still asking "when to buy," and I just laughed.
This is why some people get rich steadily, while others are constantly chasing highs and lows.
The essence of science is to ask better questions
Feynman never stuck to ready-made answers. His key point is — the quality of the questions you ask.
Most people ask: "Why is this coin rising?"
Experts ask: "How are market participants' psychological expectations changing, how is the liquidity structure evolving, what do on-chain data reflect?"
A seemingly simple shift in perspective on questions can completely reshape your understanding of the market. Low-quality question frameworks can trap your thinking, while precise question formulation can open up new perspectives. That’s why some people look at the same data but draw completely different conclusions.
Next time you do research or make trading decisions, ask yourself: Are my questions deep enough?