By moving them vertically, a representative mean curve could be formed, and individual events were then characterized by individual logarithmic differences from the standard curve.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In rallying every curve, every hill may be different than you thought. That makes it interesting.
Yes, our tree has an interesting shape. The center branches reflect the shape of the zero curve. When extreme parts of the tree are reached the branching pattern changes to accommodate the mean reversion.
This seems to be the law of progress in everything we do; it moves along a spiral rather than a perpendicular; we seem to be actually going out of the way, and yet it turns out that we were really moving upward all the time.
Everyone's curves fall in a different place. But you can't put something of mine on and not see curves.
Interesting phenomena occur when two or more rhythmic patterns are combined, and these phenomena illustrate very aptly the enrichment of information that occurs when one description is combined with another.
We think of stories a lot of the time as being horizontal texts, beginning to end. But I love the idea of having little vertical spikes in the story, too.
It seems to me that for Darwin the pulsing of evolutionary rates was a strictly vertical phenomenon.
I want to know exactly how the first few measures are going to go, and the rough shape of a movement or the whole piece and its essential character.
Logarithmic plots are a device of the devil.
I was lucky because logarithmic plots are a device of the devil.