Is there any way to set up a classroom (or an educational system) so that these students would get the right answer? Alternatively, is it even desirable?
If you teach students to think this way, you’re saying “The world is governed by comprehensible scientific laws—which is irrelevant, because people are constantly screwing with you.” This experiment might be useful in a physics class for lawyers (who would probably catch on) or conspiracy theorists (who would, at least, have more entertaining hypotheses).
A compromise might be for the teacher to not just ask for an explanation, but ask for a testable explanation, and reward people for coming up with a theory they can falsify. The sad truth is that there’s one more group that would figure out the answer right away: Creationists.
BJK is on to something: the non-emergent description of a market crash is something like “IF the Fed is raising rates and the economy is slowing down and investors are too leveraged and … … … then the market will crash,” while the emergence theory might define investor behavior and note that it will result in periodic booms and crashes, without special rules to govern either. That’s the essence of emergence: simple universal rules rather than complex specific rules.
It might feel like junk science because it crosses disciplinary borders, but that doesn’t make it invalid.