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Are you afraid of black cats?
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Would you open an umbrella indoors?
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And how do you feel about the number thirteen?
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Whether or not you believe in them, you're probably familiar with a few of these superstitions.
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So how did it happen that people all over the world knock on wood, or avoid stepping on sidewalk cracks?
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Well, although they have no basis in science, many of these weirdly specific beliefs and practices do have equally weird and specific origins.
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Because they involve supernatural causes, it's no surprise that many superstitions are based in religion.
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For example, the number thirteen was associated with the biblical Last Supper, where Jesus Christ dined with his twelve disciples just before being arrested and crucified.
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The resulting idea that having thirteen people at a table was bad luck eventually expanded into thirteen being an unlucky number in general.
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Now, this fear of the number thirteen, called triskaidekaphobia, is so common that many buildings around the world skip the thirteenth floor, with the numbers going straight from twelve to fourteen.
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Of course, many people consider the story of the Last Supper to be true, but other superstitions come from religious traditions that few people believe in or even remember.
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Knocking on wood is thought to come from the folklore of the ancient Indo-Europeans, or possibly people who predated them who believed that trees were home to various spirits.
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Touching a tree would invoke the protection or blessing of the spirit within.
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And somehow, this tradition survived long after belief in these spirits had faded away.
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Many superstitions common today in countries from Russia to Ireland are thought to be remnants of the pagan religions that Christianity replaced.
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But not all superstitions are religious.
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Some are just based on unfortunate coincidences and associations.
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For example, many Italians fear the number 17 because the Roman numeral XVII can be rearranged to form the word vixi, meaning my life had ended.
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Similarly, the word for the number four sounds almost identical to the word for death in Cantonese, as well as languages like Japanese and Korean that have borrowed Chinese numerals.
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And since the number one also sounds like the word for must, the number fourteen sounds like the phrase must die.
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That's a lot of numbers for elevators and international hotels to avoid.
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And believe it or not, some superstitions actually make sense, or at least they did until we forgot their original purpose.
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For example, theater scenery used to consist of large painted backdrops, raised and lowered by stagehands who would whistle to signal each other.
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Absent-minded whistles from other people could cause an accident.
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But the taboo against whistling backstage still exists today, long after the stagehands started using radio headsets.
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Along the same lines, lighting three cigarettes from the same match really could cause bad luck if you were a soldier in a foxhole where keeping a match lit too long could draw attention from an enemy sniper.
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Most smokers no longer have to worry about snipers, but the superstition lives on.
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So why do people cling to these bits of forgotten religions, coincidences, and outdated advice?
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Aren't they being totally irrational?
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Well, yes, but for many people, superstitions are based more on cultural habit than conscious belief.
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After all, no one is born knowing to avoid walking under ladders or whistling indoors.
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But if you grow up being told by your family to avoid these things, chances are they'll make you uncomfortable, even after you logically understand that nothing bad will happen.
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And since doing something like knocking on wood doesn't require much effort, following the superstition is often easier than consciously resisting it.
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Besides, superstitions often do seem to work.
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Maybe you remember hitting a home run while wearing your lucky socks.
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This is just our psychological bias at work.
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You're far less likely to remember all the times you struck out while wearing the same socks.
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But believing that they work could actually make you play better by giving you the illusion of having greater control over events.
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So in situations where that confidence can make a difference, like sports, those crazy superstitions might not be so crazy after all.