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In Japanese culture, what does "last good luck" mean?

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Drawing lots is a folk custom in China, and it is also one of the forms of divination. At present, Taoist temples, temples and folk temples have mostly placed sign boxes for people to draw and ask for directions. Like gossip, drawing lots is a popular forecasting method for ancient people in China to judge good fortune and bad fortune. The basis for judging good or ill luck is the number of poems signed and the allusions of poems signed.

Lottery culture has a long history in the cultural history of China and needs academic research. "Lottery fever" rose in the late 1980s, but "lottery" has existed in China since ancient times. In the history of China, ropes come one after another, which is also a cultural tradition.

Extended data:

Japanese belief is a Shinto developed from primitive religion, which initially focused on worshipping natural elves and ancestors. After Confucianism and Buddhism were introduced into Japan, they absorbed Confucian moral concepts and some Buddhist teachings, and gradually formed a polytheistic religious system, claiming to have 8 million gods,15 million gods.

Worship Zhao Tianshen as the ancestor of the emperor, publicize that the emperor is the descendant of Zhao Tianshen, and implement hereditary rule according to "God"; The ancestors of the Japanese are gods under the gods in the sky, that is, "natural nation", so Japan is called "the kingdom of gods".

Shintoism retains many remnants of primitive religions, has no systematic classics and complete religious organizations, has low quality, is unable to compete with Buddhism, and is in a state of dependence for a long time. According to the theory of "Buddha follows the Lord", the gods worshipped by Shinto are interpreted as the embodiment of Buddha or Bodhisattva. As the protectors of Buddhism, the Neo-Zen School described the gods of Shinto and the longevity god of Ise Shrine as the incarnation of Buddha.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Japanese Culture