sciencez: 'Four' Might Scare Japanese, Chinese to Death

Hardware One Forums  Hardware One Forums
  Serious Thoughts
sciencez: 'Four' Might Scare Japanese, Chinese to Death

Post New TopicPost Reply
login | logout | profile | register | preferences | private message | search | faq | forum home
 
Google
Web www.hardware-one.com
  Email this page to a friend!
 
Author Topic: sciencez: 'Four' Might Scare Japanese, Chinese to Death
Name      :
Password :
   Remember my Login

                                                
                                                

Smile Frown Embarrassed Big Grin Wink Stick out Tongue Stick out Tongue Kiss Cool Roll Eyes Approval Suspicious Evil Mad Eek Confused Dead Look Bounce around Hot! Wave Hammer! Puke!
Bold Italics Insert URL Hyperlink Insert Email Address Insert Bulleted List Quote Display Image
Message (help):

 Disable Smilies in this post.

bowwow

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 5920

quote:

http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=sciencenews&StoryID=473291

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Beware the number four -- or at least the power of the ancient Chinese superstition that links the number to death.

A researcher at the University of California, San Diego has found that deaths caused by heart attacks among U.S. residents of Chinese and Japanese descent tend to spike on the fourth of the month, an increase linked to the psychological stress brought about by fear of the number itself.

David Phillips, a UCSD sociologist, examined more than 47 million computerized death certificates for the 25-year period to 1998 for a study published in the December edition of the British Medical Journal.

The study, undertaken with UCSD mathematician Ian Abramson and a team of student researchers, found 13 percent more deaths caused by heart attack than expected on the fourth of the month for Japanese- and Chinese-Americans.

That trend was even more pronounced in California where cardiac deaths among Japanese and Chinese residents spiked by 27 percent on the fourth of the month over that period, suggesting the power of the superstition is stronger when it is reinforced by a larger group of people who share it, Phillips said.

The word "four" is read as "si" in Chinese Mandarin and "shi" in Japanese, a close homonym for the word for death in both languages and in the Cantonese dialect spoken in Hong Kong.


DIE BY FRIGHT?

Because of the superstition, the number four is often avoided in numbering hotel and hospital rooms in China and Japan. The Chinese air force also avoids the number in designating military aircraft, apparently because of the superstition, Phillips said.

"I have often wondered if people could indeed die by fright, and, if so, how this could be investigated quantitatively," said Phillips, an expert on mortality trends who has made a special study of the links between death and stress.

Despite the Western superstition that the number 13 is unlucky, the study found no statistical link between that number and deaths among Americans of European ancestry.

The idea for the study came earlier this year when Phillips and a group of students on a lunch outing drove past a Chinese grocery store called "Ranch 99," a number, one Chinese student explained, apparently chosen for its lucky connotations.

The conversation then turned to Asian views of unlucky numbers, including the taboo surrounding four. For Phillips, who had been casting about for a statistical way to test the power of fear, it was a revelation.

The conversation also reminded him of the legendary Sherlock Holmes story "The Hound of the Baskervilles," in which Sir Charles Baskerville is frightened to death by the appearance of a hound. In his study, Phillips calls the spike in deaths linked to superstition, "the Baskerville effect" after the story by Arthur Conan Doyle.

"Conan Doyle was not only a great writer but a remarkably intuitive physician as well," Phillips concluded.

IP Logged

Fsaggi

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 1811

it shor dun scare me...

IP Logged

Protector

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 7839

Hey 4 is my lucky number man

IP Logged

puddle

Very Senior Member



Total Posts: 502

huh? always thought 13 is worst. never really thought of 4 this way. pseudoscience?

IP Logged

Protector

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 7839

Well, four when spoken in Chinese rhymes with death..
And so, some of us still believes that the number 4 would bring death...LOL..
The same goes for the number 8, where it sounds like a word which means "To strike rich"...and some of the gullible older traditional people came to believe that it'll somehow bring them luck when they have something associating with the number 8...like for example..handphone numbers, car number plates..ect..
Oh..and red is supposed to be a lucky color, while black is BAADDDD

quote:
Originally posted by puddle:
huh? always thought 13 is worst. never really thought of 4 this way. pseudoscience?



This message was edited by Protector on 24 Dec 2001 02:43 AM

IP Logged

Computer

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 42423

The Teochew ( a Chinese Dialect group) loves 4. In their dialect, 4 sounds like Happiness or Happy events.

IP Logged

Computer

Ultra Senior Member



Total Posts: 42423

quote:
Originally posted by Computer:
The Teochew ( a Chinese Dialect group) loves 4. In their dialect, 4 sounds like Happiness or Happy events.


that's y we still see those 4444 number plates being listed as golden number for bidding

IP Logged

 << Next older topic | 1 | Next newer topic >>
All times are SGT.

Administrative Options: Close Topic | Move Topic | Delete Topic | Edit Subject
Post New TopicPost Reply

Jump to:  


Contact Us | Hardware One