1900, even before Einstein’s explanation of Brownian motion, the French economist Louis Bachelier came up with a similar theory for the economy. In his Ph.D. thesis, he proposed that financial markets are always close to equilibrium, but are buffeted around by the actions of individual investors as they respond in different ways to news or just the market’s current state. Any change in price is therefore essentially random. As with a piece of pollen undergoing Brownian motion, the market might look like it’s alive and has a sense of purpose, but that’s just an illusion.