Random events and human reality

In a recently published book, Walk the drunk, Leonard Mlodinow examines the role of chance, accident and emergency in nature and play in our lives. Since it expresses the wild could meandering, unpredictable path to see a very drunk person as a metaphor for our lives. Very few things turn out as we had planned it. Random events that we have not anticipated or predicted could often determine the course of our lives: where we get our education or training, which line theWork that we get in, we marry the spouse, and so on. Unforeseen accidents may be the course of our lives.

This is contrary to the way many of us tend to think of the way of the world and our lives "perspectives, at least when we were here, from. Prior to the suffering of the accidents and unforeseen events that life brings or the happy side, before enjoying the rewards that bring us just as random and unpredictable events, one might think that those are the dominant factors thatWe plan and predict, fairly accurately, that much of what happens in life corresponds quite well what happened to us where these things should be in our power. Undeniably, there are people who can honestly say that much of her life went to plan. Yes, there were no unforeseen events, it would have been predicted, but the plans were flexible enough to allow for unforeseen risks. Here we might think of the U.S. Constitution and how it was so framedthat laws and government based on it were flexible enough to deal with all eventualities later that nobody would have predicted back deal in the last decades of the eighteenth century.

But for the vast majority of us, it is reasonable to say that many factors into play that we never expected or planned, and came from those very changes the direction that was our life. So many of us can agree with Mlodinow, when he characterizes the majority of people's lives, how like a drunken manFoot bouncing willy-nilly here and there and not to any foreseeable path. How many of us can say that our lives turned out than we could have imagined and planned (or as our parents planned) than we are graduating? Did we really succeed, the beautiful young girls, our "true love" in high school or college have, or we get married at the end someone was completely unexpected, in many cases, a happy marriage crossroads in our lives with someone from another part ofWorld?

Do we really think that we would end up as computer professionals, if we do not even know what computers were, when we planned our steps After High School? "We were went to college to become engineers and teachers, but has an accident occurs, and we ended up in the military, where we were trained in electronics. Then there was a great need for programmers. And next thing we knew, because We were busy writing computer code. "For many of us when we reflect on our pathLives have taken, we will agree with Mlodinow: in many ways our lives the way of the random pathway is resembled a drunken sailor.

But Mlodinow goes confirms that much chance and uncertainty in our lives, he also argues that we often emphasize enough how our success is through talent and hard work and our failures due to incompetence. He claims that chance and randomness play a big role in determining the success or failure in much of what we do. HisExamples to support these claims are cases where too much credit given to the CEO to the success of a company (or a coach for the football success is) and too much blame on the same CEO when the company was not as well off . When he states that often the results are not by our talent, intelligence, hard work and planning, as we would like to believe.

Again he is playing over-riding point, randomness, chance, accident and generally unpredictable conditions, a much largerRole than most people admit. Anyone who follows sports, for example, knows the fate of NBA teams that Mlodinow view is mostly correct. A team for the success or failure depends on many factors, including some of the talent of the players, the cohesiveness of the team, tactics and coaching. But many of the factors are unpredictable: injuries or illnesses to key players, personal problems and psychological problems, reduce the team's "chemistry", the effects of age, the rise of young talent on the opposing teams,may also affect the economy and the political situation, a team of destiny. Just ask sports gamblers on the randomness and unpredictability of such things.

Whether Mlodinow in its general theme of the arbitrariness and chance is correct processes in nature is an interesting question that we touch. Scientists and philosophers discuss whether the apparent randomness in nature is really an aspect of nature or just a result of our limited knowledge of the operation of nature. ManyQuantum physicists see uncertainty as an integral part of physical nature, but others see, especially Albert Einstein, as only one reference to our limited knowledge. (Einstein said that he could not imagine that God quotes play dice with the universe.) Mlodinow randomness with unpredictability itself seems to equate the arbitrariness is proposing an epistemological question, that is a question of the limits of our knowledge. This would mean that the apparent randomness may not really showas a real property of nature. But much debate among scientists and philosophers of science remains on this point, and quantum physics, at least to indicate that sub-atomic level, physical nature of nature is random and vague, seems

I will talk about moving this important scientific and philosophical question. Soon I will at some Mlodinow view of the randomness and uncertainty in relation to historical and social reality develop. Apart from the deeperscientific and metaphysical questions concerning the ontological status of chance in nature, I believe that there is general agreement that "coincidence" is unpredictability as a fact. have, in other words, the events that are outside the scope of the human prediction, both common in nature and in history, and can have dire consequences for the lives of the people. Examples are fairly easy to quote. Natural disasters such as earthquakes, hurricanes, droughts, floods, volcanic eruptions can have disturbingImpact on whole societies and to change significantly the lives of countless people. In this context, think of the recent events as Hurricane Katrina which hit New Orleans area and other parts of the Gulf region, and consider the most tragic consequences for so many people in this city and in this. Then, as the year 2004 came to an end the Indonesian people suffered a tsunami that killed tens of thousands and greatly changed the lives of millions.

Earlier in ourHistory of the twentieth century we had the Dust Bowl drought, which uprooted the lives of many people in the southwest. More recently, think of the earthquake which devastated the capital of Haiti, and destroyed the lives of millions of its inhabitants. From the perspective of most human societies, including those that most people directly affected by these disasters, the events were examples of those aspects of nature that destroy the illusion that the world is regular and predictable,that man can plan for all eventualities, and expect things to work according to plan. The fact is that we can sometimes, but sometimes we can not.

What we can manage is often analogous to a roll of the dice in a casino in Las Vegas, and our best intentions and best efforts are often secondary factors in comparison to the uncertainty and randomness, that nature has in store for us. We tend to get used to (and somewhat smug) to the regular seasons and patterns in our world, and we expectthey will continue their regular, predictable pattern to continue indefinitely, and if this pattern is broken, we left are shocked and devastated. We are similar to Bertrand Russell's Chicken, which was fed regularly (like clockwork) every morning and never expected that fateful changes in the pattern, when one day instead of the usual feeding, the farmer expressed his neck.

If we are human-made disasters, turn it even more clear that our best thought out plans often rude and tragicdisrupted and canceled. The history gives us many examples where the effectiveness of war, economic depression, conflicts between groups, genocide, conquest and defeat in the competition of economies and technologies to tragic disruption of normal life. Does anyone doubt or deny that outcome much death, suffering, displacement, enslavement and oppression of any of the many wars that engages the human society? The extent and character of the resulting tragedy is never entirely predictable in advance. If theywere, people would never consent to their nation's preference for aggressive policies and military adventures. In any case, we have situations in which both good and bad luck (the roll of the dice, the draw of the card) significant impact on the direction to take the life of the people.

From the recent history, consider the fate of the young men and women unfortunate enough in a time that they threw in one of the following situations: pre-Columbian Americans (in a Caribbean island, have to be born inCentral and South America, Mexico and North America), which happened on the way of the invading Europeans, which eventually (destroyed with the help of diseases, which the Americans had no immunity), the culture and the lives of entire generations. If you have a healthy, young West African living at the time of the 'Slave economies' It was a pretty good chance that you will be taken by slave traders captured and would be shipped across the Atlantic, where the rest of your life a slavery question; and yourChildren and also want to spend her life as slave property of some slave owners.

Would later in the 1860s in the United States, a tragic and deadly civil war before slavery was officially abolished in the U.S. will be fought. Many young Americans, both north and south, pitch, age at the wrong time will lose their lives or their lives brutally from this event, one that can not be predicted disturbed with regard to their lethality,Destructiveness and consequences. Here you have a number of important historical events and trends, none of the exact nature and effects would have predicted beforehand, and all those to be fateful to millions of lives.

Entire generations of young men in England, France and Germany, which began in the military age, as the First World War and ended that come as the millions of victims in vain battlefields in Europe happens. None of these young people planned early, brutalDied, but the tragic story of the risks they took fate. In the twentieth century history of the United States, the financial collapse of the late 1920s had by the Great Depression of the 1930s was followed by large and lasting consequences for millions of lives.

Let us put the later periods of the twentieth century when World War II countless tragedies and devastation. Although the Second World War gave us great technological progress in many areas that were eventually positiveCompanies, but also a lot of progress in the technology of war, death and destruction caused, together with the general acceptance of "civilized" nations Battle Tactics that no more distinction between combatants and civilians. Consider the emergence of totalitarian states that the policy of genocide. We can not ignore, carried out the millions of victims (mostly Jews) of the Nazi Holocaust and the genocide of the Stalinist Soviet Union.

Let us not forget the millions of people inEurope, North America, Japan and China, the victims of the war had destroyed their lives and uprooted by events not of their own choice or for which they might have planned. A young Jewish couple planning marriage and children, but captured in Europe in the early 1940s, working a young Russian peasant just to feed his family, but who out of favor with the ruling group in the Kremlin fell, a young Japanese girls who just happened in Hiroshima at the time of the liveAtomic bombing of this city. Coincidence and bad luck to bring these people in the way of the event, which could not predict them, and what disturbed (to say the least country) of their lives tragically. Here, too, determined by chance and the role of the dice what they expected these unfortunate human individuals.

The events of 11 September 2001, when the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon attack provides another example of an event, the life of the affectedmany of us. Our paths cross the paths of others in a variety of ways. Some are good crosses, as if we meet by chance, that people who our inspiration comes from or who will be our life partner. But some are unhappy accidents (a car collided with us) and tragic, as the "crossroads" in people's lives as a result of the terrorist attack on 11 September 2001. We do not have the tragedies of those unfortunate victims (the occupation of the Twin forgetTowers charged at the time of the aircraft building, those who board the same flights (American Airlines, United Airlines), as the terrorists), whose paths crossed happened.

Little can be said about the pain and the loss of the survivors and the families to reduce the immediate victims. In addition, millions of lives have been affected by the aftermath of the attacks, much of this in unpredictable ways. Here think of the consequential wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the increasedSecurity and restrictions on the Patriot Act, and the resulting economic conditions. Many of us from United Airlines at the time of the attacks are working our company saw the condition worsened until he had to file bankruptcy. Many of us lost our positions with United and had to retire early. The impact of an unforeseen attack on the Americans on, and many people in other countries are still with us, and can not be fully explained. But who, if anyone saw in 1999 or 2000, the probabilitysuch an event? Very few, to be sure. Most of us were again caught by this "cube", which talks about Mlodinow.

Mlodinow calls such events such as war, genocide and economic crisis, extreme events, the major influence on the lives of millions of people. But, as he notes, requires it to take any extreme events, the role of randomness, unpredictability and coincidences in our lives. In the context of larger events, extreme or otherwise, there isnumerous accidents, coincidences and unforeseen "meeting at intersections," the major influence on the paths of our lives. Many of us can tell, events and decisions in our own lives that bear out what Mlodinow says about the universal nature of human life: that they marked in general by the accidents, fatal accidents, and could be unforeseen, we never anticipated or predicted .