Quote Originally Posted by abracax View Post
We are told that 13 is an unlucky number. The date Friday the 13th is taboo because the Knights Templar were arrested and condemned by the seneschals of Philippe IV, King of France, in a "pre-dawn raid" on Friday, October 13th, 1307. The number 13 has been shunned for centuries. Some architects omit the 13th floor from office buildings to this very day. Is it possible that the folklore associated with the number 13 is absolutely apocryphal? Or that it has become a demonized numeral precisely because it was sacred in pre-Christian times? Think about it. It is an oddly recurring sum. 12 apostles and a messiah. 12 Knights of the Round Table and King Arthur. The number 13 recurs too consistently in such significant contexts to be purely arbitrary. And of course, it?s not.

13 was a number central to certain traditions of sacred geometry, because it reflected a pattern which could be seen to exist in man, nature, and the heavens. For instance, there are 13 major joints in your body. There are 13 lunar cycles in a solar year, and the moon travels 13 degrees across the sky every day. Six circles placed around a seventh central circle is a model of geometric efficiency and perfection in the second dimension that has been known to mathematicians for ages. But this same configuration in three dimensions consists of 12 spheres arranged around one central sphere, making 13 in all - the most compact three-dimensional arrangement recurrent in nature. A commentator writing about the Aztec calendar once said that, "Thirteen is a basic structural unit in nature. It means the attracting center around which elements focus and collect." Is this, then, the reason for Christ?s 12 disciples, King Arthur?s 12 knights, or the 12 major constellations in relation to our sun? The likelihood seems great indeed.

So therefore I do not believe 13 to be a bad luck number nor have I ever believed in bad luck on Friday the 13th. Quite the contrary, I have used Friday the 13th to make money. I have played in poker games and gone to casinos on Friday the 13th in the past and walked away with minimum twice the amount I brought. The last time was on a Friday the 13th with a full moon, went to Atlantic city. I brought $400.00 with me, spent $90.00 and walked away with winnings of $400.00. All in all it was a good night and most of the $90.00 I spent was on the way there, fuel, dinner, drinks and such. I forgot to mention it was also a full moon that night and the casinos were mostly empty.
You do realize that it's possible to find patterns based around any reasonably-sized integral number? Given that the universe has been around for billions of years, the number of times that there would have been X of SOMETHING together, or that something would be associated with X is incomputable. Take 5, for instance. Boron has 5 electrons. Methane has 5 atoms. Many flowers have 5 petals.

If you add up every boron atom, methane molecule, and flower that ever was, the number is already way beyond human comprehension. Add in every 5-dollar bill, every 5-day work-week times everyone who's ever worked one, everything that has ever occurred in the month of May or in a year ending in 5, everyone in a fifth generation or each fifth crop or every fifth microbe or each fifth of a joule produced by every sun that ever existed....

It ends up being infinity. Because no matter what, somewhere, somehow, there will be five of something, or the current time will contain a five, or something will be the fifth in a cycle, or something, anything will occur that has to do with 5.

Do you get it now? You see what you want to see, and if you want to see a pattern, voila!, there it is.