Littlewood's Law

Littlewood's Law states that individuals can expect a miracle to happen to them at the rate of about one per month. The law was framed by Cambridge University Professor J. E. Littlewood, and published in a collection of his work, A Mathematician's Miscellany; it seeks, inter alia, to debunk one element of supposed supernatural phenomenology and is related to the more general Law of Truly Large Numbers, which states that with a sample size large enough, any outrageous thing is likely to happen. Littlewood's law is explained as follows. A miracle is defined as an exceptional event of special significance occurring at a frequency of one in a million. Suppose that during the hours in which a human is awake and alert, that human will experience one thing per second (for instance, seeing the computer screen; the keyboard; the mouse, the article, etc.). Suppose the human is alert for only eight hours per day: in 35 days, the human will have experienced 1,008,000 things. Accepting the definition of a miracle, one can be expected to occur each 35 days. Thus, according to this reasoning, seemingly miraculous events are actually commonplace.

References

   

See also

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
howell heflin
roger northburgh
blackhorse road station
seven sisters station
poplar dlr station
704 hauser
kang (star trek)
all the year round
egale canada
metfield
one night only
lewis henry morgan
thomas charlton
kalemegdan
global energy network institute
muppets tonight
bedford basin
holland, minneapolis
crimean tatar
gilleleje
temple (greek)
wason test
wildflower
ralston purina
john cazale
coat of arms of tatarstan
rising sun (book)
military installation
mouse mammary tumor virus
kaskad
get out the vote
chestnuts long barrow
deshengmen
list of lithuanian sky deities
kartal
aish hatorah
harry larva
russian alphabet notes
late antiquity
center high mounted stop lamp
clun
chaoyang district, beijing
list of lithuanian war deities
jack crawford (tennis player)