A draft of wind nudges a snowflake into a chain; the chain rolls, gathers, and becomes a force no single flake explains. Was the flake lucky, or persevering? The paper uses the snowball to ask a serious question: what would intelligence look like if it were a mechanism — dynamic, architectural, chaotic, non-linear — rather than a property?
Its answer reads like a specification. Such a mechanism would move perpetually between equilibrium and disequilibrium; it would reduce information entropy, transforming disorder into order; it would be normal and non-normal at the same time; and it would live in probabilistic informational states that conflict locally while, as a whole, knowing where they are headed. The lineage runs through Herbert Simon’s watchmakers: complex systems assemble from stable intermediate states, not in one heroic pass.
| Property of the mechanism | Expression in markets |
|---|---|
| Cycles between equilibrium and disequilibrium | Trends and reversals alternate; neither is an anomaly |
| Reduces information entropy | Disorder is metabolised into structure — prices organise |
| Normal and non-normal simultaneously | Calm regimes and fat tails coexist by design |
| Probabilistic informational states | A security is a set of state odds, not a point forecast |
Compounding’s arithmetic is unsentimental about interruptions. A reset does not cost only its own depth — it costs all the growth that never resumes on schedule. Two paths with the same average return but different interruption patterns end in very different places; the smooth path wins not by being faster but by never having to start over.
That is the design consequence of the snowball: engineer for path, not for peak. Smaller transformations, controlled state transitions, and drawdowns treated as design failures rather than weather. The snowball does not need spectacular snow — it needs the hill to stay cold.
The efficient-versus-inefficient debate dissolves under this lens: markets are intelligent systems metabolising disorder, and the practical question becomes how to represent their states. That is why the 3N™ engine models a universe as a network of probabilistic states — persistence, reversion, transition — rather than a ranking by size. The snowball is not a metaphor for luck; it is an argument that structure compounds, and that a benchmark should be built where the compounding happens.
Pal, M. (2022). The Snowball Effect. SSRN 4142922.
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