<%@ Register TagPrefix="socio" TagName="Mainnav" Src="/controls/main_nav.ascx" %> "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> Socionomics Institute

"Socionomics in Action" presents some of the papers, studies and observations that accompanied the development of the socionomics hypothesis; that social actions are the result, not the cause, of social mood. Here, you will find a plethora of socionomic thinking that ranges across the spectrum of social activity.


Culture

  • Popular Culture and the Stock Market
    See how cultural trends, such as those in music, movies, fashion, art and politics correlate with trends in social mood as measured by the stock market.
  • Stocks and Sex
    Explains how the same social mood forces that drive the stock market also determine demographic trends.
  • Aircraft Accidents
    Shows how increases in aircraft accidents have tended to coincide with periods of stock market pessimism.
  • Negative Mood-Themed Films
    See how the popularity of Horror, Crime/Gangster, Film Noir and Disaster films rises and falls with the stock market.
  • James Bond Film Ratings
    Explains why the popularity of the caddish secret agent has ebbed and flowed with the stock market.
  • Euthanasia
    When governments have legalized euthanasia, they have done so near the end of bear markets.
  • Anthrax Panic
    Explains how the anthrax attacks of late 2001 are better viewed as products, rather than causes, of the negative social mood of the period.
     
  • Saddam Hussein's Capture
    Uses the example of Saddam Hussein's capture in 2003 to make the point that news is a useless tool for those trying to determine the future direction of stock market prices.
     
  • Israel and Hezbollah
    Uses the history of violence in the Middle East to show that news is ineffective for determining the short-term direction of stock market prices.
     
  • The Land of Flint and Steel
    This essay from June 2001 shows how Middle Eastern violence tends to coincide with long-term stock market tops.  
  • Basketball and the Bull Market
    This essay from the late 1990s shows how the history of basketball unfolded according to the rules of the Wave Principle.
  • A Historic Extreme in Baseball Emotions
    A top in baseball? This compilation essay illustrates how the Wave Principle can be used to understand the surge in baseball’s popularity in the early 1990

Corporations

  • Microsoft
    Shows how knowledge of social mood can help predict the likelihood of government attacks on monopolies.
  • Enron
    Explains how the Enron scandal of late 2001 is better viewed as a product, rather than a cause, of the negative mood of the period.
  • Brand Names
    See how a crash in the stocks of famous brands signaled a broad decline in social mood in the early 2000s.

Fractals

 

Politics

  • Women in Politics
    The first woman in every major U.S. political office has made her breakthrough near the end of a major bear market.
  • Nuclear Tests
    See how nuclear tests worldwide have ebbed and flowed with the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Macroeconomics

Legislation

Social Causality

  • The Stock Market Is Not Physics – Part I
    In the world of physics, action is followed by reaction. Most financial analysts, economists, historians, sociologists and futurists believe that society works the same way. These two essays propose that the most certain aspect of social history is dramatic, self-induced change, which makes extrapolation under the physics paradigm an ill-suited approach for accurately predicting social trends.

  • The Stock Market Is Not Physics – Part II

  • Sociometrics
    Defines the main differences between socionomics and the Standard Social Science Model: the perceived causality between social events and their causes.

  • Social Mood Shapes Aggregate Opinion Regardless of Data
    Learn why fears of deflation from 1997-2005 ebbed and flowed not with the CPI—but with the stock market.