Beyond Coincidence recounts and analyzes more than two hundred amazing stories of synchronicity, the likes of:
Laura Buxton, age ten, releases a balloon from her backyard. It lands 140 miles away in the backyard of another Laura Buxton, also age ten. Two sisters in Alabama decide, independently, to visit the other. En route, their identical jeeps collide and both sisters are killed. The winning number in the evening...
Coincidence is a diffused term that is part of our quotidian lexicon. And so there are many ways in order to face those curious destiny's ironies that seem to play and challenge us from time to time. As appropriately the authors state the coincidence is warm matrix that makes us to feel comfortable and relatively safe from this complex, stressing and changing world. I know of many people who refuse to leave their homes without consulting their personal horoscopes or read what the Tarot has decided for them that day; those micro destinies seem to be guided by invisible random whirlwinds that helps them to maintain an artificial balance in their lives. But there is another level, much major and transcendental: it has to do with those incidents that hardly may find a reasonable explanation. These authors made a very respectable compendium of a set of veridical coincidences, occurred along all these years. Myth or superstitious? Random incidents or predetermined events dictated by a Supreme design? Butterfly effect or the tragedy's spirit that still nestle hidden behind the shadow of the fortuity? If you are an avid reader about these intriguing and mysterious issues, you will have made a brilliant choice in case to acquire this book. Recommended.
coincidence or destiny ?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I bought this book for reading on my frequent airplane flights. I am amused and amazed by the information and stories contained in the chapters I have read so far. Next time an unexpected event occurs in my life, I will think back to some of the things I read in this book.
Entertaining, but....
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Beyond Coincidence tends to jump from topic to topic with less focus than I would have expected from a journalist. Essentially it is a compendium of short stories that stretch the credulity of the reader and point out the difference between a miracle and a coincidence (the former being something that is not possible but happens, the latter something that has a low probability of occurring but does). Then Mr. Plimmer delves into quantum and relativity physics--and into Einstein's religious beliefs, always a signal of something "spooky" to come. In the end, one can't determine the actual theme of the book. Is one to believe that a "higher power" or some mysterious unifying "force" binds the universe and its constituents to one another in some mystic way? Or is it all just a cut and dried toss of a coin, heads you win, tails you lose? I realize that the reader is supposed to do some of the work him or herself, to put a little thought into the material, but the nebulous character of the theme leaves one wondering what the point of the book was. If it was to instruct, there are probably better-albeit less entertaining books-out there. If it was simply intended to entertain, it was highly successful. Having read on the topic before, I had to smile at some of the stories; they certainly reveal why people are so utterly and irresistibly amazed by coincidence. One of the best aspects of the book is that it suggests why we think as we do about coincidences: its a natural point of view that lead to human survival in a time before experiemental science was even possible. It's also natural by virtue of the fact that humans love a good, memorable story, and that sets us up to extract a skewed sample from the environment. The author's account of the pidgeons and the students responding to neutral stimuli as though they were reinforcements of whatever behavior was exhibited just before them are classic examples. I can't decide to whom I'd recommend the title. A novice to the concepts of coincidence and miracles would probably come away with a rather confused notion of what was intended. At times the author seems to refute the science, which might lead one to believe that science has it "wrong." Especially when a writer refers to Einstein's "religion" in this context, it almost invites the wrong impression. For those who already do understand something of the math behind coincidences, the book might be too anecdotal. For those of us who just enjoy an amusing read, it's really very entertaining.
terrific look at the failures of the law of probability
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
This is a terrific look at the failures of the law of probability as the authors provide over two hundred seemingly random events that appear impossible yet are documented as occurring. The included anecdotal are fun to follow though many are macabre like the sisters driving on separate surprise visits to one another crashing into each other or the three unrelated Birds crashing their three vehicles with one another. The stories grip the reader who wonders what next can happen, but hope not to them. Fans will ponder if the new age pseudoscience intelligent design has validity as the hands behind the improbable described real happenings. However, before the claims are made that this tome makes physics doctrine of intelligent design, let's not ignore that some of the outcomes of the events must have been made by an ironic stand-up comic using people as cosmic jokes. When Composer Osborne asked poet Raine if he wanted to collaborate on an opera based on a Pasternak work if they gave permission, the latter said yes, had the book in hand to read before the call and had permission since his wife is the author's niece. Believe it or not this collection is no coincidence that it is a fascinating fun analysis of the impossible happening inside a chaotic world that leads to the odds of a demand for a sequel quite high. Harriet Klausner
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