where everything either goes in one direction or the opposite. And in general, as they say, “two sides of the medal,” “two sides of the coin,” like a lot. Well, that for someone fortune... That is, fortune and fate, and this Tyche, so it turns out the subject is fate, but fate can be not only positive but also negative. How interesting that is. And the wheel of fortune, you see, it turns out that it can spin like this, and you were on the top, and now you are under the wheel. Why is the system showing me this now? What does it want to show? That now fortune and luck and fate are in my hands? That a cycle has begun, the wheel has turned, and now I am on the wheel and not under the wheel? And has someone gone under the wheel or has everyone gathered with me on the wheel? That is the question. But for now I am exploring all this, so it is enough that I am now investigating what I am listing.
Well, there is a section in Wikipedia “Chance.” “Chance (ancient Greek philosophy) In ancient Greek philosophy there were two concepts of chance, the essence of both being effects that arise randomly, but they are differentiated in the second book of Aristotle’s Physics as follows: Tyche acts in the mind (also personified as the goddess Tyche); Automaton operates in the real world. For many earlier Greek philosophers chance did not exist at all. One of the surviving fragments of Leucippus says: ‘Nothing happens at random, but everything by reason and necessity.’ For the atomists the world was entirely determined. However, Democritus also asserted that chance (‘automaton’) caused the initial creation of ‘the heavenly spheres and all worlds,’ that is, that existence itself had no preceding or determining cause, although everything that has happened since is determined. For Aristotle, on the other hand, both Tyche and Automaton are everyday phenomena. However, for Aristotle chance events were not causeless, they were simply the effect of the parallelism of two causal sequences. Thus, a falling stone which, as it happens, strikes a person is a chance event, although the falling of the stone and the passing of the person are both determined events.”
Well, what I will say about this, let me give my comment. Look how interesting, I saw this from my very childhood, from the very beginning