Deja-vu events are peculiar. More peculiar is their interaction with humans. But the most interesting part is how for every event that occurs in one life the human brain tries to understand it as a deja-vu. N thats where d problem is. Its not the similarity in events but the dissimilarities that matter. N still we plan keeping in mind that every event is just a deja-vu.
There are two forces in the world behind every event. One force tries to make the event completely stochastic and the other force tries to make it completely repetitive (but most of the time this force makes the event dependant on certain events thus making it predictive). The human brain is a bit unused to understanding the stochastic events and their probability. Thus it is away from the first force. But the human brain plans, executes and regulates according to predictive factor model and repetitive probability models. Thus it is near to the second force.
There are two forces in the world behind every event. One force tries to make the event completely stochastic and the other force tries to make it completely repetitive (but most of the time this force makes the event dependant on certain events thus making it predictive). The human brain is a bit unused to understanding the stochastic events and their probability. Thus it is away from the first force. But the human brain plans, executes and regulates according to predictive factor model and repetitive probability models. Thus it is near to the second force.
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