The Science of Luck: How Probability and Perception Shape Our Idea of Fortune
When life feels strangely aligned. You wake up, things move smoothly, and even small events seem to fall into place. Then there are other days where nothing works the way you expect. A delay turns into a problem. On the other hand, there are certain days that feel… different. Nothing dramatic, nothing you can clearly point to, but somehow things just fall into place. You reach somewhere at the right time. You meet the right person. A small decision leads to something unexpectedly good. In both cases, most people don’t stop to think too much. They just say, I’m lucky today or This is just bad luck. It feels natural to say that. Almost like the mind needs that explanation but if you slow down and look at it carefully, something interesting appears. Luck is not really something that controls events from outside. It is more like a way the mind understands what it cannot fully predict. At the base of it, two things are always involved: randomness and perception. Let’s take random...