Where do superstitions come from Stuart Vyse

Are you afraid of black cats?

Would you open an umbrella indoors?

And how do you feel about
the number thirteen?

Whether or not you believe in them,

you’re probably familiar with a few
of these superstitions.

So how did it happen that people
all over the world

knock on wood,

or avoid stepping on sidewalk cracks?

Well, although they have no basis
in science,

many of these weirdly specific beliefs
and practices

do have equally weird
and specific origins.

Because they involve supernatural causes,

it’s no surprise that many superstitions
are based in religion.

For example. the number thirteen was
associated with the biblical Last Supper,

where Jesus Christ dined
with his twelve disciples

just before being arrested and crucified.

The resulting idea that having thirteen
people at a table was bad luck

eventually expanded into thirteen
being an unlucky number in general.

Now, this fear of the number thirteen,
called triskaidekaphobia,

is so common that many buildings around
the world skip the thirteenth floor,

with the numbers going straight from
twelve to fourteen.

Of course, many people consider
the story of the Last Supper to be true

but other superstitions come from
religious traditions

that few people believe in
or even remember.

Knocking on wood is thought to come from
the folklore of the ancient Indo-Europeans

or possibly people who predated them

who believed that trees were home
to various spirits.

Touching a tree would invoke
the protection

or blessing of the spirit within.

And somehow,

this tradition survived long after
belief in these spirits had faded away.

Many superstitions common today
in countries from Russia to Ireland

are thought to be remnants of the pagan
religions that Christianity replaced.

But not all superstitions are religious.

Some are just based on unfortunate
coincidences and associations.

For example, many Italians fear
the number 17

because the Roman numeral XVII
can be rearranged to form the word vixi,

meaning my life had ended.

Similarly, the word for the number four

sounds almost identical
to the word for death

in Cantonese,

as well as languages like Japanese

and Korean that have borrowed
Chinese numerals.

And since the number one also
sounds like the word for must,

the number fourteen sounds
like the phrase must die.

That’s a lot of numbers for elevators
and international hotels to avoid.

And believe it or not,

some superstitions actually make sense,

or at least they did until we
forgot their original purpose.

For example, theater scenery used to
consist of large painted backdrops,

raised and lowered by stagehands
who would whistle to signal each other.

Absentminded whistles from other people
could cause an accident.

But the taboo against whistling backstage
still exists today,

long after the stagehands started using
radio headsets.

Along the same lines, lighting three
cigarettes from the same match

really could cause bad luck
if you were a soldier in a foxhole

where keeping a match lit too long
could draw attention from an enemy sniper.

Most smokers no longer have to worry
about snipers,

but the superstition lives on.

So why do people cling to these bits
of forgotten religions,

coincidences,

and outdated advice?

Aren’t they being totally irrational?

Well, yes, but for many people,

superstitions are based more
on cultural habit than conscious belief.

After all, no one is born knowing to avoid
walking under ladders

or whistling indoors,

but if you grow up being told
by your family to avoid these things,

chances are they’ll make
you uncomfortable,

even after you logically understand
that nothing bad will happen.

And since doing something like knocking
on wood doesn’t require much effort,

following the superstition is often
easier than consciously resisting it.

Besides, superstitions
often do seem to work.

Maybe you remember hitting a home run
while wearing your lucky socks.

This is just our psychological
bias at work.

You’re far less likely to remember
all the times you struck out

while wearing the same socks.

But believing that they work
could actually make you play better

by giving you the illusion of having
greater control over events.

So in situations where that confidence
can make a difference, like sports,

those crazy superstitions might not
be so crazy after all.

你怕黑猫吗?

你会在室内打开雨伞吗?


觉得十三号怎么样?

无论您是否相信它们,

您可能都熟悉其中的
一些迷信。

那么,世界各地的人们是如何

敲木头的,

或者避免踩到人行道裂缝的呢?

好吧,虽然它们没有科学基础,但

许多这些奇怪的特定信仰
和实践

确实有同样奇怪
和特定的起源。

因为它们涉及超自然的原因,

所以许多迷信基于宗教也就不足为奇了

例如。 十三这个数字
与圣经中的最后晚餐有关

,耶稣基督在被捕并被钉十字架之前
与他的十二个门徒共进晚餐

由此产生的想法,认为有 13
个人在一张桌子上是不吉利的,

最终扩大到 13
是一个普遍的不吉利数字。

现在,这种对数字 13 的
恐惧,被称为 triskaidekaphobia,

非常普遍,以至于世界各地的许多建筑物都
跳过了 13 层

,数字直接从
12 到 14。

当然,许多人认为
最后的晚餐的故事是真实的,

但其他迷信来自

很少有人相信
甚至记得的宗教传统。

敲木头被认为来自
古代印欧人的民间传说,

或者可能是在他们

之前相信树木是
各种精神的家园的人。

触摸一棵树会唤起

内在精神的保护或祝福。

不知何故,

在对这些精神的信仰消失之后,这种传统仍然存在很长时间

今天
在从俄罗斯到爱尔兰的国家中普遍存在的许多迷信


认为是基督教所取代的异教宗教的残余。

但并不是所有的迷信都是宗教的。

有些只是基于不幸的
巧合和联想。

例如,许多意大利人
害怕数字 17,

因为罗马数字 XVII
可以重新排列形成单词 vixi,

这意味着我的生命已经结束。

同样,数字四的

发音几乎与

粤语中的死亡一词相同,

以及

借用
中文数字的日语和韩语等语言。

由于数字 1
听起来也像是 must 的意思,

所以数字 14 听起来
像是短语 must die。

这是电梯
和国际酒店要避免的很多数字。

不管你信不信,

一些迷信实际上是有道理的,

或者至少在我们
忘记了它们最初的目的之前它们是有道理的。

例如,剧院场景过去
由大型彩绘背景组成,

由会吹口哨互相示意的舞台工作人员升高和降低

其他人心不在焉的口哨声
可能会导致事故。

但是

在舞台工作人员开始使用
无线电耳机很久之后,反对在后台吹口哨的禁忌今天仍然存在。

同样,

如果您是散兵坑中的士兵,在同

一根火柴上点燃三支香烟确实会带来厄运,因为长时间点燃火柴
可能会引起敌方狙击手的注意。

大多数吸烟者不再需要
担心狙击手,

但迷信依然存在。

那么,为什么人们会坚持这些
被遗忘的宗教、

巧合

和过时的建议呢?

他们不是完全不理性吗?

嗯,是的,但对许多人来说,

迷信更多地
基于文化习惯,而不是有意识的信仰。

毕竟,没有人生来就知道要避免
在梯子下行走

或在室内吹口哨,

但如果你长大
后被家人告知要避免这些事情,

即使你从逻辑上理解
不会有任何不好的事情,它们很可能会让你感到不舒服 发生。

而且由于敲木头之类的事情
并不需要太多努力,因此

遵循迷信往往
比有意识地抵制它更容易。

此外,
迷信似乎确实有效。

也许你记得
穿着幸运袜打出本垒打。

这只是我们
在工作中的心理偏见。 穿着同样的

袜子时,你不太可能记得你击球的所有时间

但是,相信它们
确实有效,实际上可以让你产生更好地控制事件

的错觉,从而让你玩得
更好。

因此,在这种自信
可以产生影响的情况下,比如体育运动,

那些疯狂的迷信可能
并不那么疯狂。