The concept of time mostly plays a subordinate role in finance and economics.
The assumption is that time flows continuously and that time series data should
be analyzed at regular, equidistant intervals. Nonetheless, already nearly 60
years ago, the concept of an event-based measure of time was first introduced.
This paper expands on this theme by discussing the paradigm of intrinsic time,
its origins, history, and modern applications. Departing from traditional,
continuous measures of time, intrinsic time proposes an event-based,
algorithmic framework that captures the dynamic and fluctuating nature of
real-world phenomena more accurately. Unsuspected implications arise in general
for complex systems and specifically for financial markets. For instance, novel
structures and regularities are revealed, otherwise obscured by any analysis
utilizing equidistant time intervals. Of particular interest is the emergence
of a multiplicity of scaling laws, a hallmark signature of an underlying
organizational principle in complex systems. Moreover, a central insight from
this novel paradigm is the realization that universal time does not exist;
instead, time is observer-dependent, shaped by the intrinsic activity unfolding
within complex systems. This research opens up new avenues for economic
modeling and forecasting, paving the way for a deeper understanding of the
invisible forces that guide the evolution and emergence of market dynamics and
financial systems. An exciting and rich landscape of possibilities emerges
within the paradigm of intrinsic time.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur