Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Does feng shui belong to metaphysics? Is there a scientific basis now?

Does feng shui belong to metaphysics? Is there a scientific basis now?

Fortune telling is metaphysics, and there is no scientific basis to prove it. In every big city and every small village, at least one person is a fortune teller. They seem to know people's past, present and future. If a relative is going to face an important matter, he will always try to calculate a divination and seek an answer or a solution. For fortune tellers, they don't care much about whether there is a scientific basis for fortune telling, but more about whether the fortune teller is right or not. Surprisingly, most fortune tellers are quite accurate. Why?

Actually, it has something to do with probability. When we were in primary school, we learned about "possible" events. Fortune tellers basically use "high probability" to say "possible" events, that is, not only will they happen, but they are also likely to happen. Many fortune tellers go to "see fate". Fate exists objectively, but everyone has different problems in it. People who grew up in almost the same environment have similar problems in the general direction. As long as fortune-tellers master some problems that people of the same class may encounter, and classify them according to different people's personalities and environments, it is easy for them to know some things you have encountered in the past from your clothes, expressions and body language.

For example, he said that you experienced two serious setbacks, and then you began to recall, selected two things that were particularly impressive from the memories, and found that the fortune teller was right, so you trusted him especially. I wonder if you have noticed that fortune tellers often say something ambiguous, which also increases his accuracy. For example, once upon a time, three people went to Beijing to catch the exam. Fortune teller Lu Yu asked him, "What will be the results of their three exams?" The fortune teller compared them to a "one" with his index finger, and then said, "I can only tell you so much."

As a result, only one of the three people was admitted. Thinking of the fortune teller's "one" and his "only one person can be admitted", I feel that he is really a psychic. In fact, this "one" can be "take the exam together", "none of them can pass the exam", "only one can pass the exam" and "only one can not pass the exam", which obviously contains all the possibilities. This ambiguous approach directly improves the accuracy of fortune tellers to 100%.