Monday, July 15, 2013

Calculating for Risk


                                                       
                                                                Calculating for Risk

                          Hexagram 12, 5th line; Wilhelm Barnes translation "BOOK OF CHANGES"
                       
                          a) Standstill is giving way. Great fortune for the great man. "What if it should fail, What if it should fail?" In this way he ties it to a cluster of Mulberry shoots.
                          b) The good fortune of the superior man consists in the fact that the place is correct and appropriate.

                           People have been coming to psychics, readers, mediums, oracles, etc, for as long as we have had language. (Possibly a baseless assertion.) Calculating risk is the whole reason reading is so dangerous. Economists can be wrong. Doctors can be wrong. Detectives can be wrong. If you can make educated guesses about calculating risks, you have an advantage. If your wrong, that is to be expected! That's where style and tact will teach you practical humility.

                     
                        If you are interested in "Speed reading," Be Prepared. "If you want become adept and adroit at reading, You must read as much as you can." Quoted from my teacher, Steve. If you like a good adventure story this could be fun. Enjoy.

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