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Wikipedia

Fortune-telling

Fortune telling is the practice of predicting information about a person's life.[1] The scope of fortune telling is in principle identical with the practice of divination. The difference is that divination is the term used for predictions considered part of a religious ritual, invoking deities or spirits, while the term fortune telling implies a less serious or formal setting, even one of popular culture, where belief in occult workings behind the prediction is less prominent than the concept of suggestion, spiritual or practical advisory or affirmation.

"Gypsy Fortune-Teller" (1841) by Taras Shevchenko

Historically, Pliny the Elder describes use of the crystal ball in the 1st century CE by soothsayers ("crystallum orbis", later written in Medieval Latin by scribes as orbuculum).[2]

Contemporary Western images of fortune telling grow out of folkloristic reception of Renaissance magic, specifically associated with Romani people.[1] During the 19th and 20th century, methods of divination from non-Western cultures, such as the I Ching, were also adopted as methods of fortune telling in western popular culture.

An example of divination or fortune telling as purely an item of pop culture, with little or no vestiges of belief in the occult, would be the Magic 8-Ball sold as a toy by Mattel, or Paul II, an octopus at the Sea Life Aquarium at Oberhausen used to predict the outcome of matches played by the Germany national football team.[3]

There is opposition to fortune telling in Christianity, Islam, Baháʼísm and Judaism based on scriptural prohibitions against divination.

Terms for one who claims to see into the future include fortune teller, crystal-gazer, spaewife, seer, soothsayer, sibyl, clairvoyant, and prophet; related terms which might include this among other abilities are oracle, augur, and visionary.

Fortune telling is dismissed by skeptics as being based on pseudoscience, magical thinking and superstition.

Methods

 
Chart of the hand
 
The screene of fortune here behold, fortune-telling game, ca.1650-1750

Common methods used for fortune telling in Europe and the Americas include astromancy, horary astrology, pendulum reading, spirit board reading, tasseography (reading tea leaves in a cup), cartomancy (fortune telling with cards), tarot card reading, crystallomancy (reading of a crystal sphere), and chiromancy (palmistry, reading of the palms). The last three have traditional associations in the popular mind with the Roma and Sinti people.

Another form of fortune telling, sometimes called "reading" or "spiritual consultation", does not rely on specific devices or methods, but rather the practitioner gives the client advice and predictions which are said to have come from spirits or in visions.

Sociology

 
Romani fortune telling. Facsimile of a woodcut in Cosmographia universalis of Sebastian Münster.

Western fortune tellers typically attempt predictions on matters such as future romantic, financial, and childbearing prospects. Many fortune tellers will also give "character readings". These may use numerology, graphology, palmistry (if the subject is present), and astrology.

In contemporary Western culture, it appears that women consult fortune tellers more than men.[4] Some women have maintained long relationships with their personal readers. Telephone consultations with psychics grew in popularity through the 1990s, and by the 2010s additional contact methods such as email and videoconferencing also became available, but none of these have completely replaced traditional in-person methods of consultation.[5]

As a business in North America

 
Storefront psychic fortune teller in Boston

Discussing the role of fortune telling in society, Ronald H. Isaacs, an American rabbi and author, opined, "Since time immemorial humans have longed to learn that which the future holds for them. Thus, in ancient civilization, and even today with fortune telling as a true profession, humankind continues to be curious about its future, both out of sheer curiosity as well as out of desire to better prepare for it."[6] Popular media outlets like The New York Times have explained to their American readers that although 5000 years ago, soothsayers were prized advisers to the Assyrians, they lost respect and reverence during the rise of Reason in the 17th and 18th centuries.[7]

With the rise of commercialism, "the sale of occult practices [adapted to survive] in the larger society," according to sociologists Danny L. and Lin Jorgensen.[8] Ken Feingold, writer of "Interactive Art as Divination as a Vending Machine," stated that with the invention of money, fortune telling became "a private service, a commodity within the marketplace".[9]

As J. Peder Zane wrote in The New York Times in 1994, referring to the Psychic Friends Network, "Whether it's 3 P.M. or 3 A.M., there's Dionne Warwick and her psychic friends selling advice on love, money and success. In a nation where the power of crystals and the likelihood that angels hover nearby prompt more contemplation than ridicule, it may not be surprising that one million people a year call Ms. Warwick's friends."[7]

Clientele

In 1994, the psychic counsellor Rosanna Rogers of Cleveland, Ohio, explained to J. Peder Zane that a wide variety of people consulted her: "Couch potatoes aren't the only people seeking the counsel of psychics and astrologers. Clairvoyants have a booming business advising Philadelphia bankers, Hollywood lawyers and CEO's of Fortune 500 companies... If people knew how many people, especially the very rich and powerful ones, went to psychics, their jaws would drop through the floor."[7] Rogers "claims to have 4,000 names in her rolodex."[7]

Janet Lee, also known as the Greenwich psychic, claims that her clientele often included Wall Street brokers who were looking for any advantage they could get. Her usual fee was around $150 for a session but some clients would pay between $2,000 and $9,000 per month to have her available 24 hours a day to consult.[10]

Typical clients

In 1982, Danny Jorgensen, a professor of Religious Studies at the University of South Florida offered a spiritual explanation for the popularity of fortune telling. He said that people visit psychics or fortune tellers to gain self-understanding,[11] and knowledge which will lead to personal power or success in some aspect of life.[12]

In 1995, Ken Feingold offered a different explanation for why people seek out fortune tellers:[9]

We desire to know other people's actions and to resolve our own conflicts regarding decisions to be made and our participation in social groups and economies. ... Divination seems to have emerged from our knowing the inevitability of death. The idea is clear—we know that our time is limited and that we want things in our lives to happen in accord with our wishes. Realizing that our wishes have little power, we have sought technologies for gaining knowledge of the future... gain power over our own [lives].

Ultimately, the reasons a person consults a diviner or fortune teller depend on cultural and personal expectations.

Services

Traditional fortune tellers vary in methodology, generally using techniques long established in their cultures and thus meeting the cultural expectations of their clientele.

In the United States and Canada, among clients of European ancestry, palmistry is popular[13] and, as with astrology and tarot card reading, advice is generally given about specific problems besetting the client.

Non-religious spiritual guidance may also be offered. An American clairvoyant by the name of Catherine Adams has written, "My philosophy is to teach and practice spiritual freedom, which means you have your own spiritual guidance, which I can help you get in touch with."[14]

In the African American community, where many people practice a form of folk magic called hoodoo or rootworking, a fortune-telling session or "reading" for a client may be followed by practical guidance in spell-casting and Christian prayer, through a process called "magical coaching".[15]

In addition to sharing and explaining their visions, fortune tellers can also act like counselors by discussing and offering advice about their clients' problems.[13] They want their clients to exercise their own willpower.[16]

Full-time careers

 
A fortune-telling storefront on the boardwalk in Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey

Some fortune tellers support themselves entirely on their divination business; others hold down one or more jobs, and their second jobs may or may not relate to the occupation of divining. In 1982, Danny L., and Lin Jorgensen found that "while there is considerable variation among [these secondary] occupations, [part-time fortune tellers] are over-represented in human service fields: counseling, social work, teaching, health care."[17] The same authors, making a limited survey of North American diviners, found that the majority of fortune tellers are married with children, and a few claim graduate degrees.[18] "They attend movies, watch television, work at regular jobs, shop at K-Mart, sometimes eat at McDonald's, and go to the hospital when they are seriously ill."[19]

Legality

In 1982, the sociologists Danny L., and Lin Jorgensen found that, "when it is reasonable, [fortune tellers] comply with local laws and purchase a business license."[17] However, in the United States, a variety of local and state laws restrict fortune telling, require the licensing or bonding of fortune tellers, or make necessary the use of terminology that avoids the term "fortune teller" in favor of terms such as "spiritual advisor" or "psychic consultant." There are also laws that outright forbid the practice in certain districts.

For instance, fortune telling is a class B misdemeanor in the state of New York. Under New York State law, S 165.35:

A person is guilty of fortune telling when, for a fee or compensation which he directly or indirectly solicits or receives, he claims or pretends to tell fortunes, or holds himself out as being able, by claimed or pretended use of occult powers, to answer questions or give advice on personal matters or to exercise, influence or affect evil spirits or curses; except that this section does not apply to a person who engages in the aforedescribed conduct as part of a show or exhibition solely for the purpose of entertainment or amusement.[20]

Lawmakers who wrote this statute acknowledged that fortune tellers do not restrict themselves to "a show or exhibition solely for the purpose of entertainment or amusement" and that people will continue to seek out fortune tellers even though fortune tellers operate in violation of the law.

Similarly, in New Zealand, Section 16 of the Summary Offences Act 1981 provides a one thousand dollar penalty for anyone who sets out to "deceive or pretend" for financial recompense that they possess telepathy or clairvoyance or acts as a medium for money through use of "fraudulent devices." As with the New York legislation cited above, however, it is not a criminal offence if it is solely intended for purposes of entertainment.

Saudi Arabia also bans the practice outright, considering fortune telling to be sorcery and thus contrary to Islamic teaching and jurisprudence. It has been punishable by death.[21]

Critical analysis

 
Fortune-telling service in Japan, struck by bad luck as part of their shrine collapsed.

Fortune telling is dismissed by skeptics as being based on magical thinking and superstition.[22][23][24][25]

Skeptic Bergen Evans suggested that fortune telling is the result of a "naïve selection of something that have happened from a mass of things that haven't, the clever interpretation of ambiguities, or a brazen announcement of the inevitable."[26] Other skeptics claim that fortune telling is nothing more than cold reading.[27]

A large amount of fraud has occurred in the practice of fortune telling.[28]

Fortune telling and how it works raises many critical questions. For example, fortune-telling occurs through various methods such as psychic readings and tarot cards. Similarly these methods are largely based on random phenomena. For example, astrologers believe that the movement of stars in the sky can have implications on one's life.[29] In the case of tarot cards, people believe that images displayed on the cards have significant meanings on their lives. However, there is a lack of evidence to support why such things, such as the stars, would have any implications on our lives.

Additionally, fortune-telling readings and predictions made by horoscopes, for example, are often general enough to apply to anyone. In cold reading, for example, readers often begin by stating general descriptions and continuing to make specifics based on the reactions they receive from the person whose life they are predicting.[30] The tendency for people to deem general descriptions as being representative to themselves has been termed the Barnum effect and has been studied by psychologists for many years.[31]

Nonetheless, even with a lack of evidence supporting the various methods of fortune-telling and the many frauds that have occurred by psychic readers, amongst others, fortune-telling continues to become popular around the world. There are many reasons for the appealing nature of fortune-telling such as that people often experience stress when there is uncertainty and thus seek to gain deeper insight into their lives.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Melton, J. Gordon. (2008). The Encyclopedia of Religious Phenomena. Visible Ink Press. pp. 115-116. ISBN 1-57859-209-7
  2. ^ Pliny the Elder (1831). Caii Plinii Secundi Historiæ naturalis libri xxxvii, cum selectis comm. J. Harduini ac recentiorum interpretum novisque adnotationibus. p. 579. Retrieved 7 November 2015. (in Latin)
  3. ^ Associated Press6 July 2010
  4. ^ Blécourt, Willem de; Usborne, Cornelle. (1999). Women's Medicine, Women's Culture: Abortion and Fortune telling in Early Twentieth-Century Germany and the Netherlands. Medical History 43: 376-392.
  5. ^ Burton, Valentina. The Fortune Teller's Guide to Success: Creating a Wonderful Career as a Psychic. 2011; Lucky Mojo Curio Co. (revised) Fourth Edition 2018.
  6. ^ Isaacs, Ronald H. Divination, Magic, and Healing the Book of Jewish Folklore. Northvale N.J.: Jason Aronson, 1998. pg 55
  7. ^ a b c d (Zane 1994)
  8. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 376)
  9. ^ a b (Feingold 1995, p. 399)
  10. ^ Kadet, Anne (8 March 2014). . The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  11. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 381)
  12. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 375)
  13. ^ a b "Clairvoyant or counsellor? Meet the woman who walks a fine line." The Northern Echo. 27 October 2000.
  14. ^ Adams, Catherine. "What is Clairvoyance and What Can I Expect in a Session With Catherine?" 18 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Magical Coaching and Spiritual Advice are among the ancillary services offered by some diviners and root doctors. These consultation services are usually engaged on an hourly basis." -- excerpt from an article on "magical coaching" at the Association of Independent Readers and Rootworkers web site
  16. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 384)
  17. ^ a b (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 377)
  18. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 337)
  19. ^ (Jorgensen & Jorgensen 1982, p. 387)
  20. ^ Leginfo.state.ny.us
  21. ^ Fortune Teller Faces Execution in Saudi Arabia 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine pattayadailynews.com 23 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine 1 April 2010 retrieved 17 July 2010
  22. ^ Pronko, Nicholas Henry. (1969). Panorama of Psychology. Brooks/Cole Publishing Company. p. 18
  23. ^ Miller, Gale. (1978). Odd Jobs: The World of Deviant Work. Prentice-Hall. pp. 66-68
  24. ^ Carroll, Robert Todd. (2003). "Divination (fortune telling)". The Skeptic's Dictionary. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  25. ^ Regal, Brian. (2009). Pseudoscience: A Critical Encyclopedia. Greenwood. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-313-35507-3
  26. ^ Evans, Bergen. (1955). The Spoor of Spooks: And Other Nonsense. Purnell. p. 16
  27. ^ Cogan, Robert. (1998). Critical Thinking: Step by Step. University Press of America. p. 212. ISBN 0-7618-1067-6
  28. ^ Steiner, Robert A. (1996). Fortunetelling. In Gordon Stein. The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. pp. 281-290. ISBN 1-57392-021-5
  29. ^ Thagard, Paul R. (1978). Why astrology is a pseudoscience in The Philosophy of Science Association, 1978 Volume 1, pp. 223-234.
  30. ^ Dutton, D.L. (1988). The Cold Reading Technique in Experientia, Volume 44, pp. 326-332
  31. ^ Dutton, D.L. (1988). The Cold Reading Technique in Experientia, Volume 44, pp. 326-332

References

  • Feingold, Ken (1995), "OU: Interactivity as Divination as Vending Machine", Leonardo, Third Annual New York Digital Salon, 28 (5): 399–402, doi:10.2307/1576224, JSTOR 1576224, S2CID 61727726
  • Hughes, M., Behanna, R; Signorella, M. (2001). Perceived Accuracy of Fortune Telling and Belief in the Paranormal. Journal of Social Psychology 141: 159-160.
  • Jorgensen, Danny L.; Jorgensen, Lin (1982), "Social Meanings of the Occult", The Sociological Quarterly, 23 (3): 373–389, doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.1982.tb01019.x.
  • Zane, J. Peder (11 September 1994), "Soothsayers as Business Advisers; You Are Going to Go on a Long Trip…", The New York Times.

External links

  •   Media related to Fortune-telling at Wikimedia Commons

fortune, telling, fortune, teller, redirects, here, form, origami, paper, fortune, teller, other, uses, fortune, teller, disambiguation, fortune, telling, practice, predicting, information, about, person, life, scope, fortune, telling, principle, identical, wi. Fortune teller redirects here For the form of origami see Paper fortune teller For other uses see Fortune teller disambiguation Fortune telling is the practice of predicting information about a person s life 1 The scope of fortune telling is in principle identical with the practice of divination The difference is that divination is the term used for predictions considered part of a religious ritual invoking deities or spirits while the term fortune telling implies a less serious or formal setting even one of popular culture where belief in occult workings behind the prediction is less prominent than the concept of suggestion spiritual or practical advisory or affirmation Gypsy Fortune Teller 1841 by Taras Shevchenko Historically Pliny the Elder describes use of the crystal ball in the 1st century CE by soothsayers crystallum orbis later written in Medieval Latin by scribes as orbuculum 2 Contemporary Western images of fortune telling grow out of folkloristic reception of Renaissance magic specifically associated with Romani people 1 During the 19th and 20th century methods of divination from non Western cultures such as the I Ching were also adopted as methods of fortune telling in western popular culture An example of divination or fortune telling as purely an item of pop culture with little or no vestiges of belief in the occult would be the Magic 8 Ball sold as a toy by Mattel or Paul II an octopus at the Sea Life Aquarium at Oberhausen used to predict the outcome of matches played by the Germany national football team 3 There is opposition to fortune telling in Christianity Islam Bahaʼism and Judaism based on scriptural prohibitions against divination Terms for one who claims to see into the future include fortune teller crystal gazer spaewife seer soothsayer sibyl clairvoyant and prophet related terms which might include this among other abilities are oracle augur and visionary Fortune telling is dismissed by skeptics as being based on pseudoscience magical thinking and superstition Contents 1 Methods 2 Sociology 3 As a business in North America 3 1 Clientele 3 2 Typical clients 3 3 Services 3 4 Full time careers 3 5 Legality 4 Critical analysis 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksMethods Edit Chart of the hand The screene of fortune here behold fortune telling game ca 1650 1750 Common methods used for fortune telling in Europe and the Americas include astromancy horary astrology pendulum reading spirit board reading tasseography reading tea leaves in a cup cartomancy fortune telling with cards tarot card reading crystallomancy reading of a crystal sphere and chiromancy palmistry reading of the palms The last three have traditional associations in the popular mind with the Roma and Sinti people Another form of fortune telling sometimes called reading or spiritual consultation does not rely on specific devices or methods but rather the practitioner gives the client advice and predictions which are said to have come from spirits or in visions Aeromancy by interpreting atmospheric conditions Alectromancy by observation of a rooster pecking at grain Aleuromancy by flour Astrology by the movements of celestial bodies Astromancy by the stars Augury by the flight of birds Auramancy by someone s aura or feelings Bazi or four pillars by hour day month and year of birth Bibliomancy by books frequently but not always religious texts Cartomancy by playing cards tarot cards or oracle cards Ceromancy by patterns in melting or dripping wax Chiromancy by the shape of the hands and lines in the palms Chronomancy by determination of lucky and unlucky days Clairvoyance by spiritual vision or inner sight Cleromancy by casting of lots or casting bones or stones Cold reading by using visual and aural clues Crystallomancy by crystal ball also called scrying Extispicy by the entrails of animals Face reading by means of variations in face and head shape Feng shui by earthen harmony Gastromancy by stomach based ventriloquism historically Geomancy by markings in the ground sand earth or soil Haruspicy by the livers of sacrificed animals Horary astrology the astrology of the time the question was asked Hydromancy by water I Ching divination by yarrow stalks or coins and the I Ching Kau cim by means of numbered bamboo sticks shaken from a tube Lithomancy by stones or gems Molybdomancy by molten metal after dumped in cold water Naeviology by moles scars or other bodily marks Necromancy by the dead or by spirits or souls of the dead Nephomancy by shapes of clouds Numerology by numbers Oneiromancy by dreams Onomancy by names Onychomancy by a form of palmistry looking at the fingernails Palmistry by lines and mounds on the hand Parrot astrology by parakeets picking up fortune cards Paper fortune teller origami used in fortune telling games Pendulum reading by the movements of a suspended object Pyromancy by gazing into fire Rhabdomancy divination by rods Runecasting or Runic divination by runes Scrying by looking at or into reflective objects Spirit board by planchette or talking board Taromancy by a form of cartomancy using tarot cards Tasseography or tasseomancy by tea leaves or coffee grounds Sociology Edit Romani fortune telling Facsimile of a woodcut in Cosmographia universalis of Sebastian Munster Western fortune tellers typically attempt predictions on matters such as future romantic financial and childbearing prospects Many fortune tellers will also give character readings These may use numerology graphology palmistry if the subject is present and astrology In contemporary Western culture it appears that women consult fortune tellers more than men 4 Some women have maintained long relationships with their personal readers Telephone consultations with psychics grew in popularity through the 1990s and by the 2010s additional contact methods such as email and videoconferencing also became available but none of these have completely replaced traditional in person methods of consultation 5 As a business in North America Edit Storefront psychic fortune teller in Boston Discussing the role of fortune telling in society Ronald H Isaacs an American rabbi and author opined Since time immemorial humans have longed to learn that which the future holds for them Thus in ancient civilization and even today with fortune telling as a true profession humankind continues to be curious about its future both out of sheer curiosity as well as out of desire to better prepare for it 6 Popular media outlets like The New York Times have explained to their American readers that although 5000 years ago soothsayers were prized advisers to the Assyrians they lost respect and reverence during the rise of Reason in the 17th and 18th centuries 7 With the rise of commercialism the sale of occult practices adapted to survive in the larger society according to sociologists Danny L and Lin Jorgensen 8 Ken Feingold writer of Interactive Art as Divination as a Vending Machine stated that with the invention of money fortune telling became a private service a commodity within the marketplace 9 As J Peder Zane wrote in The New York Times in 1994 referring to the Psychic Friends Network Whether it s 3 P M or 3 A M there s Dionne Warwick and her psychic friends selling advice on love money and success In a nation where the power of crystals and the likelihood that angels hover nearby prompt more contemplation than ridicule it may not be surprising that one million people a year call Ms Warwick s friends 7 Clientele Edit In 1994 the psychic counsellor Rosanna Rogers of Cleveland Ohio explained to J Peder Zane that a wide variety of people consulted her Couch potatoes aren t the only people seeking the counsel of psychics and astrologers Clairvoyants have a booming business advising Philadelphia bankers Hollywood lawyers and CEO s of Fortune 500 companies If people knew how many people especially the very rich and powerful ones went to psychics their jaws would drop through the floor 7 Rogers claims to have 4 000 names in her rolodex 7 Janet Lee also known as the Greenwich psychic claims that her clientele often included Wall Street brokers who were looking for any advantage they could get Her usual fee was around 150 for a session but some clients would pay between 2 000 and 9 000 per month to have her available 24 hours a day to consult 10 Typical clients Edit In 1982 Danny Jorgensen a professor of Religious Studies at the University of South Florida offered a spiritual explanation for the popularity of fortune telling He said that people visit psychics or fortune tellers to gain self understanding 11 and knowledge which will lead to personal power or success in some aspect of life 12 In 1995 Ken Feingold offered a different explanation for why people seek out fortune tellers 9 We desire to know other people s actions and to resolve our own conflicts regarding decisions to be made and our participation in social groups and economies Divination seems to have emerged from our knowing the inevitability of death The idea is clear we know that our time is limited and that we want things in our lives to happen in accord with our wishes Realizing that our wishes have little power we have sought technologies for gaining knowledge of the future gain power over our own lives Ultimately the reasons a person consults a diviner or fortune teller depend on cultural and personal expectations Services Edit Traditional fortune tellers vary in methodology generally using techniques long established in their cultures and thus meeting the cultural expectations of their clientele In the United States and Canada among clients of European ancestry palmistry is popular 13 and as with astrology and tarot card reading advice is generally given about specific problems besetting the client Non religious spiritual guidance may also be offered An American clairvoyant by the name of Catherine Adams has written My philosophy is to teach and practice spiritual freedom which means you have your own spiritual guidance which I can help you get in touch with 14 In the African American community where many people practice a form of folk magic called hoodoo or rootworking a fortune telling session or reading for a client may be followed by practical guidance in spell casting and Christian prayer through a process called magical coaching 15 In addition to sharing and explaining their visions fortune tellers can also act like counselors by discussing and offering advice about their clients problems 13 They want their clients to exercise their own willpower 16 Full time careers Edit A fortune telling storefront on the boardwalk in Point Pleasant Beach New Jersey Some fortune tellers support themselves entirely on their divination business others hold down one or more jobs and their second jobs may or may not relate to the occupation of divining In 1982 Danny L and Lin Jorgensen found that while there is considerable variation among these secondary occupations part time fortune tellers are over represented in human service fields counseling social work teaching health care 17 The same authors making a limited survey of North American diviners found that the majority of fortune tellers are married with children and a few claim graduate degrees 18 They attend movies watch television work at regular jobs shop at K Mart sometimes eat at McDonald s and go to the hospital when they are seriously ill 19 Legality Edit In 1982 the sociologists Danny L and Lin Jorgensen found that when it is reasonable fortune tellers comply with local laws and purchase a business license 17 However in the United States a variety of local and state laws restrict fortune telling require the licensing or bonding of fortune tellers or make necessary the use of terminology that avoids the term fortune teller in favor of terms such as spiritual advisor or psychic consultant There are also laws that outright forbid the practice in certain districts For instance fortune telling is a class B misdemeanor in the state of New York Under New York State law S 165 35 A person is guilty of fortune telling when for a fee or compensation which he directly or indirectly solicits or receives he claims or pretends to tell fortunes or holds himself out as being able by claimed or pretended use of occult powers to answer questions or give advice on personal matters or to exercise influence or affect evil spirits or curses except that this section does not apply to a person who engages in the aforedescribed conduct as part of a show or exhibition solely for the purpose of entertainment or amusement 20 Lawmakers who wrote this statute acknowledged that fortune tellers do not restrict themselves to a show or exhibition solely for the purpose of entertainment or amusement and that people will continue to seek out fortune tellers even though fortune tellers operate in violation of the law Similarly in New Zealand Section 16 of the Summary Offences Act 1981 provides a one thousand dollar penalty for anyone who sets out to deceive or pretend for financial recompense that they possess telepathy or clairvoyance or acts as a medium for money through use of fraudulent devices As with the New York legislation cited above however it is not a criminal offence if it is solely intended for purposes of entertainment Saudi Arabia also bans the practice outright considering fortune telling to be sorcery and thus contrary to Islamic teaching and jurisprudence It has been punishable by death 21 Critical analysis Edit Fortune telling service in Japan struck by bad luck as part of their shrine collapsed Fortune telling is dismissed by skeptics as being based on magical thinking and superstition 22 23 24 25 Skeptic Bergen Evans suggested that fortune telling is the result of a naive selection of something that have happened from a mass of things that haven t the clever interpretation of ambiguities or a brazen announcement of the inevitable 26 Other skeptics claim that fortune telling is nothing more than cold reading 27 A large amount of fraud has occurred in the practice of fortune telling 28 Fortune telling and how it works raises many critical questions For example fortune telling occurs through various methods such as psychic readings and tarot cards Similarly these methods are largely based on random phenomena For example astrologers believe that the movement of stars in the sky can have implications on one s life 29 In the case of tarot cards people believe that images displayed on the cards have significant meanings on their lives However there is a lack of evidence to support why such things such as the stars would have any implications on our lives Additionally fortune telling readings and predictions made by horoscopes for example are often general enough to apply to anyone In cold reading for example readers often begin by stating general descriptions and continuing to make specifics based on the reactions they receive from the person whose life they are predicting 30 The tendency for people to deem general descriptions as being representative to themselves has been termed the Barnum effect and has been studied by psychologists for many years 31 Nonetheless even with a lack of evidence supporting the various methods of fortune telling and the many frauds that have occurred by psychic readers amongst others fortune telling continues to become popular around the world There are many reasons for the appealing nature of fortune telling such as that people often experience stress when there is uncertainty and thus seek to gain deeper insight into their lives See also EditChinese fortune telling Chinese spiritual world concepts Divination Divination in African traditional religion Flim Flam Psychics ESP Unicorns and other Delusions Ka Bala board game Fortune teller machine Houdini s debunking of psychics and mediums I Ching divination Bob Nygaard Psychic investigator Televangelist Peter Popoff exposed by James Randi Prophecy Psychic Blues Confessions of a Conflicted Medium Rose Mackenberg Historic investigator of psychic mediums Tengenjutsu fortune telling Notes Edit a b Melton J Gordon 2008 The Encyclopedia of Religious Phenomena Visible Ink Press pp 115 116 ISBN 1 57859 209 7 Pliny the Elder 1831 Caii Plinii Secundi Historiae naturalis libri xxxvii cum selectis comm J Harduini ac recentiorum interpretum novisque adnotationibus p 579 Retrieved 7 November 2015 in Latin Associated Press6 July 2010 Blecourt Willem de Usborne Cornelle 1999 Women s Medicine Women s Culture Abortion and Fortune telling in Early Twentieth Century Germany and the Netherlands Medical History 43 376 392 Burton Valentina The Fortune Teller s Guide to Success Creating a Wonderful Career as a Psychic 2011 Lucky Mojo Curio Co revised Fourth Edition 2018 Isaacs Ronald H Divination Magic and Healing the Book of Jewish Folklore Northvale N J Jason Aronson 1998 pg 55 a b c d Zane 1994 Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 376 a b Feingold 1995 p 399 Kadet Anne 8 March 2014 In Greenwich Where Money Is No Object The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 12 November 2017 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 381 Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 375 a b Clairvoyant or counsellor Meet the woman who walks a fine line The Northern Echo 27 October 2000 Adams Catherine What is Clairvoyance and What Can I Expect in a Session With Catherine Archived 18 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Magical Coaching and Spiritual Advice are among the ancillary services offered by some diviners and root doctors These consultation services are usually engaged on an hourly basis excerpt from an article on magical coaching at the Association of Independent Readers and Rootworkers web site Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 384 a b Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 377 Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 337 Jorgensen amp Jorgensen 1982 p 387 Leginfo state ny us Fortune Teller Faces Execution in Saudi Arabia Archived 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine pattayadailynews com Archived 23 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine 1 April 2010 retrieved 17 July 2010 Pronko Nicholas Henry 1969 Panorama of Psychology Brooks Cole Publishing Company p 18 Miller Gale 1978 Odd Jobs The World of Deviant Work Prentice Hall pp 66 68 Carroll Robert Todd 2003 Divination fortune telling The Skeptic s Dictionary Retrieved 20 April 2016 Regal Brian 2009 Pseudoscience A Critical Encyclopedia Greenwood p 55 ISBN 978 0 313 35507 3 Evans Bergen 1955 The Spoor of Spooks And Other Nonsense Purnell p 16 Cogan Robert 1998 Critical Thinking Step by Step University Press of America p 212 ISBN 0 7618 1067 6 Steiner Robert A 1996 Fortunetelling In Gordon Stein The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal Prometheus Books pp 281 290 ISBN 1 57392 021 5 Thagard Paul R 1978 Why astrology is a pseudoscience in The Philosophy of Science Association 1978 Volume 1 pp 223 234 Dutton D L 1988 The Cold Reading Technique in Experientia Volume 44 pp 326 332 Dutton D L 1988 The Cold Reading Technique in Experientia Volume 44 pp 326 332References EditFeingold Ken 1995 OU Interactivity as Divination as Vending Machine Leonardo Third Annual New York Digital Salon 28 5 399 402 doi 10 2307 1576224 JSTOR 1576224 S2CID 61727726 Hughes M Behanna R Signorella M 2001 Perceived Accuracy of Fortune Telling and Belief in the Paranormal Journal of Social Psychology 141 159 160 Jorgensen Danny L Jorgensen Lin 1982 Social Meanings of the Occult The Sociological Quarterly 23 3 373 389 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1982 tb01019 x Zane J Peder 11 September 1994 Soothsayers as Business Advisers You Are Going to Go on a Long Trip The New York Times External links Edit Media related to Fortune telling at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fortune telling amp oldid 1137075065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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