Southwind17
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,154
My wife's explanation is that my dead mother-in-law put the suggestion in our minds to see that particular movie at that particular time and park in that particular spot so that we would notice the plates that were already there.
I holidayed in Rome a few years back. One afternoon we came upon some market stalls, from which I bought a pendant (coin with a hole in it) for my neck band. Only problem was it didn't come with a link to put it on the band. "No problem", I thought: "I'll pick one up from a jeweler when we get back to Oz".
So we return to the hotel and I decide to take a shower. I'm walking to the bathroom across the bare timber floor in the bedroom and something jabs into my foot. I reach down and pick up the offending article and ... well you can guess what it was!
Funny how your wife's 'explanation' exactly fits my experience too, in principle!
To be clear, by this do you mean that the prediction here is the channelling of a "spirit", or getting the winning numbers?My point is that if someone makes a prediction (e.g., channeling a "spirit" to get the winning numbers), and the odds are hundreds of millions to one that they get it right, and they get it right, that would be exceptionally compelling proof that something weird went one.
As has been pointed out to you, everybody who does the lottery is essentially 'predicting' the winning numbers. Most people do it essentially randomly, some have memorable dates, etc., but either way it's a prediction. Intuitively, electing for a 'quick pick' whereby the machine randomly chooses the numbers for you seems less likely to lead to a win. After all, How can two lotto machines possibly both choose the same set of numbers?!? Thing is, the process of picking numbers and the process of the lotto machine choosing the winning numbers are completely unrelated events. It matters not how they're picked.
Anybody can pick lotto numbers and ascribe a reason for how that particular set of numbers were chosen. Indeed, I sometimes pretend that some 'divine hand' is guiding the movement of the pen across the number card when I pick mine. Of course, that's just playful thinking on my part - I've not won yet, and don't expect to, although I remain hopeful!
The fact that your wife ascribed a reason (which, BTW, cannot be scientifically verified) for seeing NM plates before she actually saw some in no ways adds any credence to such reasoning. Her reasoning could have been absolutely anything she chooses and the result would have been the same.