The material presented here amounts to what is believed to be<br >the largest collection of coincidences yet gathered in one book.<br >It comes from a wide variety of sources: my own research over<br >a number of years; readers of my previous books on the<br >subject, my daily newspaper column and articles; radio and TV<br >audiences who have phoned or written as result of my appear-<br >ing on a show; and acquaintances, friends and colleagues. For<br >the help of all these generous people I am most grateful.<br > I-towever, the book is not merely a co~ection o~ ~ascinating<br >anecdotes and the like. It attempts to look at the thorny<br >question of the meaning- if any- of coincidences in, I hope, as<br >objective a way as possible.<br > As the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer wrote, the real<br >significance of coincidences exists only in relation to the<br >individual who experiences them; for other people, for whom<br >they have no significance, these coincidences pass unnoticed<br >into the background of everyday life. Like most unqualified<br >assertions, though, this is not totally correct. As we shall see,<br >there are many coincidences involving others that cannot but<br >fail to impress the rest of us.<br > On this point, it is often argued that to dwell on trivial <br > coincidences when discussing the phenomenon is to belittle<br > the possible importance of significant coincidences. In this<br > book there are what many people would c~nsider a goodly<br > number of trivial coincidences rubbing shtl~lders with the<br > significant events. <br ><br >
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