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Furiously
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on: September 09, 2005, 12:36:38 PM

Quote
By Paul Hoskins

DUBLIN (Reuters) - It's official -- scientists have proved that the people of the small Irish town of Skibbereen do not have unnaturally good fortune. But they do seem pretty happy anyway.

The picturesque town near Ireland's southern coast earned a reputation as the country's luckiest after a series of lottery wins.

But Professor Richard Wiseman of the University of Hertfordshire in England told a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Dublin that he had proved there was nothing particularly lucky about the place.

He bought 50 lottery tickets in Skibbereen and another 50 in Dublin. He didn't fare any better in the country town than in the capital, proving with statistical precision that its luck is little more than a myth.

But that didn't dampen the spirits of the locals.

"They didn't strike me as very superstitious, they struck me as very outgoing and optimistic," he said. "But it (Skibbereen) is imbued with this idea of being a very lucky place."

"I suspect what's happening is that, by chance, somewhere has to do well and it happens to be Skibbereen," he said.

Optimism can be a blessing. Studies show that a positive outlook improves the chances of cancer sufferers, he said. Positive people, who cross their fingers rather than avoiding ladders, perhaps make their own 'luck'.

"It maintains an optimistic world view which can then become a self-fulfilling prophecy."

But he said an irrational belief in good luck can be a very dangerous thing for the hardened gambler who turns negatives into positives so that losses become 'near-misses'.

"When applied to a situation like gambling it can actually be very, very negative."

They're still always after me lucky charms.

Miasma
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Reply #1 on: September 09, 2005, 02:05:44 PM

Could you please comment in "Furiously's Features" articles. I'm feeling like all my hard work was for nothing.

Carmel Corn for the win btw.
Only because you asked -  wink

The term "Luck of the Irish" actually refers to having really bad luck, because of all the crap that has happened to Ireland.
Furiously
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Reply #2 on: September 09, 2005, 02:06:40 PM

Ahh but their cereal is magically delicious.

Samwise
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Reply #3 on: September 09, 2005, 03:03:39 PM

He bought 50 lottery tickets in Skibbereen and another 50 in Dublin. He didn't fare any better in the country town than in the capital, proving with statistical precision that its luck is little more than a myth.

What a completely unscientific test.   He completely ignored the possibility that the town's good luck was due to, say, heredity, or something in the water, rather than pure geography. 
TheWalrus
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Reply #4 on: September 09, 2005, 06:22:37 PM

Did he purchase them at one store? Perhaps he needed to sample various outlets to get a better cross section of the Luck Area.

vanilla folders - MediumHigh
AOFanboi
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Reply #5 on: September 11, 2005, 02:33:36 AM

Ahh but their cereal is magically delicious.
Add some painkiller and call it "curiously delicious".

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Sky
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Reply #6 on: September 11, 2005, 11:46:06 AM

As an Irish person, I have to point out that it's called "The Luck of the Irish".

Not the good luck of the Irish. Big diff.
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