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Illusion of Due. The Gambler's Fallacy and the Dangerous Human Need to Find Patterns in Randomness
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- Nombre de pages185
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-27436-9
- EAN9783565274369
- Date de parution26/02/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille864 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
On August 18, 1913, at the Monte Carlo Casino, the roulette ball landed on black. Then it landed on black again. And again. By the fifteenth time in a row, the crowd was in a frenzy. Gamblers rushed to bet millions of francs on red, absolutely convinced that after so many blacks, red was mathematically "due" to hit. It landed on black twenty-six times in a row, bankrupting everyone who believed the wheel had a memory.
This legendary disaster perfectly encapsulates the Gambler's Fallacy: the deeply ingrained, irrational belief that independent random events will somehow self-correct.
Our brains are master pattern-recognition machines, evolutionarily designed to find meaning in chaos. But when applied to sheer probability, this survival trait becomes a devastating cognitive flaw. We assume that flipping five tails in a row means a head is guaranteed next, ignoring the cold fact that the coin does not remember the previous flips. This eye-opening psychological journey breaks down the math of probability and the biology of superstition.
It reveals how the Gambler's Fallacy sabotages far more than just casino bets, severely corrupting how judges hand down sentences, how investors buy stocks, and how HR managers hire employees. Break free from the illusion of destiny. Learn to short-circuit your brain's desperation for patterns, embrace the cold reality of randomness, and make logical decisions in a chaotic world.
Our brains are master pattern-recognition machines, evolutionarily designed to find meaning in chaos. But when applied to sheer probability, this survival trait becomes a devastating cognitive flaw. We assume that flipping five tails in a row means a head is guaranteed next, ignoring the cold fact that the coin does not remember the previous flips. This eye-opening psychological journey breaks down the math of probability and the biology of superstition.
It reveals how the Gambler's Fallacy sabotages far more than just casino bets, severely corrupting how judges hand down sentences, how investors buy stocks, and how HR managers hire employees. Break free from the illusion of destiny. Learn to short-circuit your brain's desperation for patterns, embrace the cold reality of randomness, and make logical decisions in a chaotic world.



