Is an arbitrary Brownian path a viscosity solution of every differential equation?
My intuition is that a path of Brownian motion is so ill-behaved that it not only does not have derivatives anywhere but it also does not have (local) subdifferentials and superdifferentials. Equivalently, there exists no positive measure of points at which one can append either a smooth underestimator or a smooth overestimator the Brownian path. (An overrestimator would be a smooth function that lies above the Brownian path but touches it at one point. It is a test function in the definition of viscosity solution.)
The conclusion that an arbitrary Brownian path solves every differential equation seems nonsensical to me. Am I missing something in the definition of a viscosity solution?