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Where do superstitions come from? - Stuart Vyse

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    Are you afraid of black cats?
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    Would you open an umbrella indoors?
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    And how do you feel about
    the number thirteen?
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    Whether or not you believe in them,
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    you're probably familiar with a few
    of these superstitions.
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    So how did it happen that people
    all over the world
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    knock on wood,
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    or avoid stepping on sidewalk cracks?
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    Well, although they have no basis
    in science,
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    many of these weirdly specific beliefs
    and practices
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    do have equally weird
    and specific origins.
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    Because they involve supernatural causes,
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    it's no surprise that many superstitions
    are based in religion.
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    For example. the number thirteen was
    associated with the biblical Last Supper,
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    where Jesus Christ dined
    with his twelve disciples
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    just before being arrested and crucified.
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    The resulting idea that having thirteen
    people at a table was bad luck
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    eventually expanded into thirteen
    being an unlucky number in general.
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    Now, this fear of the number thirteen,
    called triskaidekaphobia,
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    is so common that many buildings around
    the world skip the thirteenth floor,
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    with the numbers going straight from
    twelve to fourteen.
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    Of course, many people consider
    the story of the Last Supper to be true
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    but other superstitions come from
    religious traditions
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    that few people believe in
    or even remember.
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    Knocking on wood is thought to come from
    the folklore of the ancient Indo-Europeans
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    or possibly people who predated them
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    who believed that trees were home
    to various spirits.
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    Touching a tree would invoke
    protection
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    or blessing of the spirit within.
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    And somehow,
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    this tradition survived long after
    belief in these spirits had faded away.
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    Many superstitions common today
    in countries from Russia to Ireland
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    are thought to be remnants of the pagan
    religions that Christianity replaced.
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    But not all superstitions are religious.
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    Some are just based on unfortunate
    coincidences and associations.
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    For example many Italians fear
    the number 17
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    because the Roman numeral XVII
    can be rearranged to form the word vixi,
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    meaning my life had ended.
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    Similarly, the word for the number four
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    sounds almost identical
    to the word for death
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    in Cantonese,
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    as well as languages like Japanese
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    and Korean that have borrowed
    Chinese Numerals.
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    And since the number one also
    sounds like the word for must,
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    the number fourteen sounds
    like the phrase must die.
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    That's a lot of numbers for elevators
    and international hotels to avoid.
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    And believe it or not,
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    some superstitions actually make sense,
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    or at least they did until we
    forgot their original purpose.
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    For example, theater scenery used to
    consist of large painted backdrops,
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    raised and lowered by stagehands
    who would whistle to signal each other.
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    Absentminded whistles from other people
    could cause an accident.
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    But the taboo against whistling backstage
    still exists today,
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    long after the stagehands started using
    radio headsets.
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    Along the same lines, lighting three
    cigarettes from the same match
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    really could cause bad luck
    if you were a soldier in a foxhole
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    where keeping a match lit too long
    could draw attention from an enemy sniper.
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    Most smokers no longer have to worry
    about snipers,
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    but the superstition lives on.
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    So why do people cling to these bits
    of forgotten religions,
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    coincidences,
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    and outdated advice?
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    Aren't they being totally irrational?
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    Well, yes, but for many people,
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    superstitions are based more
    on cultural habit than conscious belief.
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    After all, no one is born knowing to avoid
    walking under ladders
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    or whistling indoors,
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    but if you grow up being told
    by your family to avoid these things,
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    chances are they'll make
    you uncomfortable,
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    even after you logically understand
    that nothing bad will happen.
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    And since doing something like knocking
    on wood doesn't require much effort,
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    following the superstition is often
    easier than consciously resisting it.
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    Besides, superstitions
    often do seem to work.
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    Maybe you remember hitting a home run
    while wearing your lucky socks.
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    This is just our psychological
    bias at work.
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    You're far less likely to remember
    all the times you struck out
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    while wearing the same socks.
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    But believing that they work
    could actually make you play better
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    by giving you the illusion of having
    greater control over events.
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    So in situations in where that confidence
    can make a difference, like sports,
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    those crazy superstitions might not
    be so crazy after all.
Title:
Where do superstitions come from? - Stuart Vyse
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:11

English subtitles

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