Luck and Omens
When the cruise ship Aurora was launched three years ago, the champagne bottle failed to break on its hull - considered a bad omen. Subsequently it broke down in its maiden voyage and recently on a cruise a stomach bug hit many of its passengers. So what is the relevance of the omen and why should a bottle failing to break cause repercussions down the track?
Well, to answer the second question first, the bottle failing to break does not cause subsequent events. I mentioned previously about what I called 'torms', four-dimensional time-forms. These torms trace a pattern when they travel through three-dimensional space. Imagine a still lake and an object, say a cube, that moves from under the surface to above the surface. If the cube moves with one of its flat sides first then from the surface you will suddenly see the cube emerge, it will continue to move out for a while then suddenly stop when the cube is fully emerged. Alternatively, if the cube emerges with a corner first, then you will see a pyramid emerge which will get bigger and bigger until it reaches a maximum end then it will get smaller and smaller until it reaches a point and disappears.
Similarly, when a torm comes through three-dimensional space it traces a pattern that depends on the shape of the torm and its placement as it moves through the three-dimensional universe. The result of this is that certain torms will have the effect of causing a precursor, an event that precedes further catastrophic events. Alternatively, the 'precursor' may occur after the main event or simultaneously to it. This is what causes omens and if you learn to interpret the signs it can serve you well in guiding you through the maze of life.
This does not disprove the idea of cause and effect, it simply explains forces that currently lie outside of scientific understanding. Science has no understanding of what we call luck or omens and because scientists can't explain it they say that they can't be explained. This is nonsense.