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The law of meanness is fiction or reality

There is nothing more true and truthful than the law of meanness. The mother-in-law will never come, if you are cleaned in the house, but will necessarily come with a visit, when you decided to relax and forget about cleaning. Charging on the camera will end at the exact moment when your daughter turns over for the first time on the stomach. And the weather on the street will be the colder, the easier you will dress. We have long been accustomed to this state of affairs, ironically "well, as usual." Some even try to outwit meanness, for example, taking an umbrella with them - to prevent the rain from sure. But very few people know that the law of meanness exists in reality. He has a very specific wording, the history of origin and even his own formula!

The interpretation of the law of meanness

The law of meanness was known in ancient times. Someone thinks that it was open in the time of Achilles and its only vulnerable point - the heel. Someone refers to the ancient legend of the old man Podlez, who supposedly left a scroll with his wording. However, for the first time the known effect was recorded in the United States, in 1949, when engineer Edward Murphy evaluated the operation of an aircraft engine. At the moment when the propeller began to spin the other way (as it turned out later, it was put backwards), Murphy ironically noted that if there is some way of assembling leading to the tragedy, one of the technicians will necessarily choose it. Later, at a press conference, the constant malfunctioning of the aircraft was called "Murphy's law." So the name and wording officially got into the media and spread all over the world.

All over the world, the laws of meanness have several analogs. For example, the general effect, according to which a system that works properly, will certainly fail when it is demonstrated to the customer. And yet everyone knows the effect of a sandwich: whatever one may turn, and the sandwich falls to the floor with the oil side down. Especially if the floor is badly cleaned carpet. From the same series, and the law of the tele-master in the USSR, when a broken television suddenly miraculously began to work, it was necessary to wait for a deficit specialist in those days. This also applies to the effect of the doctor - when the symptoms of the disease suddenly disappear, when the recording finally comes to a specialist ... And much, much more. But if there is a law, there must be some logical explanation for it?

What explains the law of meanness?

In fact, psychologists have long since unraveled this famous phenomenon. The fact that people inherently tend to blame some higher forces in their failures, to seek excuses for their actions from the outside. It's easier to shift responsibility for your action or inaction to someone else. We were not too lazy to carry a heavy umbrella, and the rain came from baseness. We did not spill hot sweet tea, but the law of meanness splashed it onto a new laptop. It's easier and not so conscience.

But there is another reason - people tend to focus on failure. For example, we need to pass the course work. We write it in advance and rent it out for a couple of days before, completely ignoring the switch-off on the eve of the deadline for electricity. And if we did not have time to do the work on time, reaching out to the extreme, then the absence of light will be a tragedy for us, caused by the same law. Although electricity would be extinguished and so, and so, just in the second case, this event for us is much more palpable and more negatively colored. Or another example: we play a computer game, we get various bonuses on which we do not focus, but as soon as the task for this element appears, it ceases to fall out. And we swear the law of meanness, not realizing that we so want to go through the tour as soon as possible, that we are obsessed with an unhappy, innocent bonus, the probability of falling out is the same before and after the task.

The third explanation lies in the formula of the law of meanness. Yes-yes, it seems incredible, but it really exists and is deduced, presumably, by that same eldest Podlezem! According to the formula, the result directly depends on our desire and bad luck factor and inversely proportional to the unfortunate coincidence of circumstances:

Result = (Desire * Bad luck factor) / Unsuccessful coincidence

The bad luck factor is determined by our mood. So what happens, the more the desire, the higher the probability of obtaining an excellent result? So maybe the law of meanness is not at all? It's just that when a person wants an event to happen, he wants to see it happen. And if he is only able to complain about the injustice of fate, he will be followed by failure. The similar attracts a similar - long deduced and verified truth. And for some phenomena there are quite rational explanations. The sandwich falls oil only because the oil is heavy. Disruption of demonstration performances is possible from excessive excitement. And unforeseen circumstances can occur on any day, just in moments of work they feel sharper. So is there a law of meanness? Probably, everyone should answer this question independently. It is more comfortable for someone to write off failures on the intervention of higher forces. And someone used to rely only on himself and tries to maintain a positive attitude, no matter what happens. Not in vain because the effect of Murphy almost does not affect children and optimists - they are open to the world, so meanness and avoids them.

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