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Golden Rules Of Investment

12 GOLDEN RULES OF INVESTMENT Live by these 12 rules and let your money grow!  1) The past is irrelevant –   Do not rely on past performances and build castles in the air. Invest for tomorrow and live for today.  2) Opinions can hurt. Don’t ask too many people –   just don’t!! To each, his own. What works for someone else, may not work for you and vice-versa. Your investment plan should be as unique as the back of your hand. More importantly, it must suit you best.  3) Everyone’s journey is different. Understand yours. –   Do not invest if you’re not clear on the purpose. Do not draw parallels with other investors. Your need for investing, risk appetite, and nature of investments is of utmost importance. You need to understand what you are doing.  4) Don’t allow your ego to engage with professional advice –   Trust your financial advisor! Google can give you lots of information but your advisor will tell you what’s best for you. Listen and then act!  5) Overthinking will never allow

QUANTUM MECHANICS

In 1926 there emerged the theory known as quantum mechanics, developed., in the form most useful to chemists, by Erwin Schrödinger (of the University of Zurich). He worked out mathematical expressions to describe the motion of an electron in terms of its energy. These mathematical expressions are called wave equations since they are based upon the concept that electrons show properties not only of particles but also of waves. 

A wave equation has a series of solutions, called wave functions, each corresponding to a different energy level for the electron. For all but the simplest of systems, doing the mathematics is so time-consuming that at present-and superhigh-speed computers will someday change this-only approximate solutions can be obtained. Even so, quantum mechanics gives answers agreeing so well with the facts that it is accepted today as the most fruitful approach to an understanding of atomic and molecular structure. 

"Wave mechanics has shown us what is going on, and at the deepest possible level. it has taken the concepts of the experimental chemist-the imaginative perception that came to those who had lived in their laboratories and allowed their minds to dwell creatively upon the facts that they had found and it has shown how they all fit together; how, if you wish, they all have one single rationale; and how this hidden relationship to each other can be brought out."C. A. Coulson, London, 1951.

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