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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sheer Superstition, May 30, 2003
Is there any validity to superstition? Does throwing salt over your left shoulder keep away bad luck? Will walking under a ladder bring bad luck? Armando Benitez thinks the answer to questions like this is yes, and he tells why in his new book, Sheer Superstition. Benitez says that "superstition has been present in the human soul since the first stirrings of the human intellect." He digs into the reasons for this, searching for the origin of superstitions, and maintains that "the basic premise of all superstitions is that we have direct control over our destiny, that we can change our destiny, because we are free to choose the path we wish to traverse." He turns to the ancient Greeks, using the mythology of the Fates and their control of human fortune, as a model for explaining how events seemingly beyond our ability to influence or change can affect our lives. Then he describes how we can use superstition to make choices to overcome these events. The way to make changes in our lives, or destiny, is to start with very small changes. Those changes often hinge on a stroke of luck. Benitez believes that certain practices can affect luck, thus giving people a measure of control. He has bet on horse races for many years, and he uses his racetrack experiences as examples of how people can use superstitions to outwit Fate and improve their luck. While some superstitions apply only to certain people or at certain times, others are universal. Benitez describes them all, often with explanations of how they came into being, and explains how individuals can put the relevant ones to work in their own lives. Benitez says that "our luck should be nurtured, just as a sensible person guards his health." In Sheer Superstition, he provides readers with the knowledge and tools they need to change and nurture their luck.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sheer Superstition, by Armando Benitez, October 17, 2000
This is the best book I have ever read in my life! Being a superstious person, I bought it seeking for some sort of assurance that my superstition is not something entirely irrational. I was not disappointed. An added bonus was that I bought it expecting a 256 page book. But it is 316 pages of absolutely fascinating reading. It is chock-full of the most absorbing anecdotes from history, and explanations of why superstition is something that we should not try to do without. Superstitious taboos, Benitez says, are something we have inherited from our ancient forbears, and which contribute to our continued survival, the same as do the instinctive behavior of animals. The book is profound and wise, with many insights into human and animal behavior, explanations of why things are as they are, and - most important of all - suggestions on how we can improve our day-to-day luck (such as when we are at the race track or engaged in any other endeavor having to do with probability) as the first step to becoming wiser and more fortunate in life in general. And on top of all this, it is exceedingly funny throughout. Whether you accept the author's postulates or not, the book will make you laugh.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Sheer Superstition, by Armando Benitez, April 12, 2003
A Kid's Review
A reviewer (mariannemonte@msn.com), A reviewer, May 16, 2001, Sheer Superstition What is luck? Is it something we are born with or can it be learned and acquired? 'Why do some people have the golden touch,' Benitez rhetorically asks, 'whereas everything others of us touch turns into ... matter?' Can observing certain superstitions keep us out of trouble and improve our basic fortune? These are the questions the author endeavors to answer in this entertaining and thought-provoking book. Benitez, evidently a poster child of superstition (he would carry out his former occupation, apparently in stakeout surveying, without ever using the number 13, he says) maintains that there is a force, either evil or benign, depending on our situation in life, that holds us to our more or less preordained destiny. By observing certain superstitious precautions and by taking evasive action, however, we can evade our evil destiny and misfortune by basically fooling Fate and Destiny, escaping into another reality where things are better for us. Benitez reminisces upon his childhood years in a poverty-stricken migrant family in the San Joaquin Valley of California during the Great Depression to illustrate his points, as well as by quotes and examples from ancient and modern authors - Herodotus, Pausanias, Plutarch, Aeschylus and others. His meandering, tangential, recursive style frequently takes us to the race track, where he says his theories can be put to the test, sometimes profitably, by using the occurrence of coincidences and divinatory practices to pick winning horses. Altogether, a humorous and highly entertaining rendering of metaphysical thought and newage philosophy.
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