Saturday, March 30, 2024

37

 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d6iQrh2TK98&pp=ygUKdmVyaXRhc2l1bQ%3D%3D

For those with a fascination for numbers when they have a real meaning instead of, “Hey carnival sideshow attendee, give me your money”, Veritasium has a nice video just released.

They go over multiple reasons why 37 shows up more often than you’d think.  So a seemingly random number that’s chosen isn’t really so random after all.  I find this to be a variation of the Least Interesting Number Paradox or Least Interesting <Anything> Paradox.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interesting_number_paradox

Imagine a person so dull, boring and uninteresting that if we were to be able to objectively identify them as the dullest person, they instantly lose that status since being that famously dull is actually quite interesting.  Maybe not to advance very high on the chart, but it’s a claim to fame that they hold over the second least interesting person.  Until that person replaced them when they advance from least interesting to not least interesting.  Etc…

People think they pick random numbers, yet fail.  Imagine you are a realtor and have a lockbox for your key to one of your listings.  It’s got four dials of all digits 0-9.  You have multiple houses to show and know that it’s a good idea for security to do a different combination for each one.  So you pick a four digit code at random.

Or do you?

Odds are that you dismiss some combinations immediately.  Anything that’s four of the same digit like 4-4-4-4.  1-2-3-4 is likely to be the choice of a lot of lazy people, so no.  This could be even psychologically and subconsciously fine tuned to feeling that two even and two odd digits are more random than a 3-1 split or 4-0 sweep.  And it’s really not.  A true random number generator has an equal chance of generating 7492 as 6666.

So why does 37 appear as a choice for a random number between 1-100 so often?  First there’s the process of picking that starts the .not being actually random.  We tend to start at the beginning.  One digit numbers don’t seem random enough.  Odd numbers seem more random than even.  Prime numbers seem more random than non primes.  Double digits don’t seem random.  And we’re too lazy to think further after hitting somewhere around 37.

And there’s a life of repetition, which the video explains how 37 is actually mathematically significant.  And if something gets repeated often enough, it sticks better.  Even if it’s the wrong answer, like Sandy Hook family members are crisis actors.

Beware the gematria aficionado exposed to 37.  Because whether they know it or not they are exposed to this more frequently than lots of other numbers.  And we’re talking about a bit further advanced than the stage of just wanting to watch a video and maybe leave a positive comment about how awesome it was.  (It wasn’t.  You’re just being part of the problem.)  We’re talking the kind of person that has poked around on the special functions in the original calculator with prime factors.  Because gematria works the opposite of trying to create a random number.  Gematria tries to create a familiar number.  A number that justifies the propaganda they are digesting alongside their gematria.  And when not being directed by the ruling class and they encounter a familiar number they get a hit on, a little mental tickle with

The triple digit number.  Those just jump right out as not being coincidental.  Not being random.  Not being anything but something important.  And since 111 is 37*3 every triple digit repeated number is divisible by 37.

It’s not in fashion, and never really was, but some gematria gets mathematically bizarre with randomly adding digits or taking prime factors added together or whatever other weirdness can be attempted to get attention.  It makes them feel like they’re doing real math and doing actual research and decoding.  An example?  111 is 3*37.  7+3=10.  10*3=300.  Then add that to the decode of CCC Roman numerals stuff.  Fortunately, this type of nonsense is not polluting the internet with fresh insanity daily.

What is in fashion and always will be in fashion is 37’s evil part of being involved with triple digits.  Those are a staple.  And they won’t even explain why they’re talking about 128 and then all of a sudden throw in 222.  They saw it, it jumped out at them.  And it seems important.

And the funny thing about 222 is the presence of the bullshit “Sumerian” cipher.  The translation of which is, “Let’s just randomly pick a number to multiply our already meaningless number by.”  37*6=222.  Now everything that equals 37 has elevated status to an important number.  That’s the real importance of 37 to gematria.  37 isn’t a totally bad number to start off with, but it’s role in mutating into triple digit numbers is way more powerful.

No comments:

Post a Comment