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1. Murphy's Law.
Murphy's Law is a psychological effect that was proposed by Edward Murphy, also known as Murphy's Law.
Murphy's theorem. If there are two or more ways to do something, and one of the choices will lead to disaster, someone must make that choice. The bottom line is this: if there's a chance that something will go bad, no matter how small that chance, it will happen.
2. The Twenty-Eight Law.
The Law of Twenty-Eight was written by the Italian economist Pareto in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
discovered. He believes that in any group of things, the most important is only a small part of it, about 20%, and the remaining 80%, although it is the majority, is secondary, hence the law of 28.
3. The Matthew effect.
The Matthew effect refers to the phenomenon that the strong get stronger and the weak get weaker, and is widely used in social psychology.
Education, finance, and science. The social phenomenon reflected is polarization, with the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer.
From a parable in the Bible's New Testament Gospel of Matthew: "Whosoever hath be multiplied, that he may be superfluous; and if he does not, he shall take all that he has."
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The top five laws of the world are:
1. The law of watches.
The law of watches refers to the fact that having more than two watches does not help people judge the time more accurately, but creates confusion and makes the person looking at the watch lose the judgment of the time; Another implication is that everyone cannot pick two different codes of conduct or values at the same time, otherwise that person's behavior will be thrown into chaos.
2. The law of broken windows.
The law of broken windows was first proposed by James Wilson and George Kailin, which holds that undesirable phenomena in the environment, if left unchecked, will tempt people to imitate or even exacerbate them.
3. The Twenty-Eight Law.
The Law of 28, also known as the Law of 80 20, the Law of the Critical Minority, the Law of the Unimportant Majority, the Law of the Least Effort, the Principle of Imbalance, etc., was discovered by the Italian economist Pareto. He believes that in any particular group, the important factors usually account for only a few (20) and the unimportant factors account for the majority (80), so as long as the important few factors can be controlled, the whole situation can be controlled.
4. Matthew's Law.
Matthew's Law reflects a common phenomenon in today's society, which is that winners take all and success is the mother of success.
5. Murphy's Law.
Murphy's Law is a psychological effect proposed by Edward Murphy, and its core idea is that "if you are worried about something happening, then it is more likely to happen".
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