Resources
Incurable Optimists
Quotes
Lottery Tickets
Good Baptists Dont Gamble
Topic : Gambling
Gamblers Fallacy
The Gamblers Fallacy is the mistaken notion that repetition changes the odds. If you flip a coin five times, always getting tails, theres still a 50-50 chance that youll get tails on your next flip. You cant say Tails has come up five times in a row, so now its time that heads comes up.
Resources
- God in the Dock, C. S. Lewis, p. 59.
- The Moral Catastrophe, David Hocking, Harvest House, 1990, pp. 227ff
Incurable Optimists
Human beings are incurable optimists. They believe they have a pretty good chance to win a lottery, but that there is hardly any chance of getting killed in a traffic accident.
Quotes
- Horse sense is what keeps horses from betting on what people will do. - Oscar Wilde
- There are two times in a mans life when he should not speculate: when he cant afford it, and when he can. - Mark Twain
- It may be that the race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strongbut thats the way to bet. - Damon Runyon
Lottery Tickets
- Average number of dollars, per capita, spent on lottery tickets each year, in the top ten lottery states: $135.
Good Baptists Dont Gamble
My grandmother, a staunch Southern Baptist, had marched me off to Sunday school and church regularly. So when I switched to the Episcopal church after marriage, she challenged me: Whats wrong with the Baptist Church, son?
Well, I explained, Carole and I flipped a coin to see if we would go to her church or mine, and I lost.
Serves you right, said my grandmother. Good Baptists dont gamble.