Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: tossed coins and the future

Author: Thorsten Czub

Date: 22:29:45 02/25/01

Go up one level in this thread


On February 25, 2001 at 19:00:48, Richard Heldmann wrote:
>>luck is a word for people who have no ideas about what happends.
>
>Perhaps, you also know which side of a tossed coin will appear every time?

i can produce series where i can tell you in forward which side
will be seen. but this is easy. cause a tossed coin
has only 2 sides.
take 2 dices, put them into a cup,
and i can often tell you in forward which number they will
bring.

i can do it not always but in serials.

when my mind is free, and i am in good mood (no rational blocking of
emotions) i can tell you events in forward. then - after a while i get tired
and it is not working anymore. i mix wish and rational thoughts (alike "it
cannot be 2x6 again") and lose fade. but when i relax again,
i can do it.

its not difficult. any human beeing can do it. its just a problem
of concentration. if you think too much with your rational left brain halve,
you will of course never be able to do so. you must try to forget rational
thoughts. then maybe you can do it. when buddhist speak a koan in mind,
they try to block the logic to make way free for inspiration.

the future can be seen in forward. no doubt about this.
the titanic desaster was written before in a book. and the ship in the book
was named titanica or titan. luck ? no. the writer has seen it in forward.
he was inspirated. artists often think more with the right brain halve. and less
logical. therefore they have an open mind for intuition and inspiration.
very logical rational people, using their left brain halves, have a lack
of those features. they cannot look forward and have bad intuition.
therefore they conclude wrong things. bad luck.

there is nothing special about this. we have 2 brain halves. and they are
specialized. and depending which side you use more often, you have a different
point of view of the world outside.



This page took 0 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.