Lumifer comments on When the uncertainty about the model is higher than the uncertainty in the model - Less Wrong
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That's just a complicated way of saying "the model was wrong".
Um... it's not that easy. If your model breaks down in a pretty spectacular fashion you don't get to recover by inventing a multiple for your standard deviation. In the particular case of the stock markets, one way would be to posit a heavy-tailed underlying distribution and if it's sufficiently heavy-tailed the standard deviation isn't even defined. Another, a better way would be to recognize that the underlying generating process is not stable.
In general, the problem with recognizing the uncertainty of your model is that you still need a framework to put it into and if your model blew up you may be left without any framework at all.