Famous Coin Flips That Changed History
The history of yes or no is the history of humanity itself. Before we built cities, before we wrote laws, before we traded goods, we asked the universe simple binary questions and acted on the answers.
The Unbroken Chain of Yes and No
What makes yes or no decision making so remarkable is its universality. There is no known culture in human history that has not developed some form of binary oracle. From the Aboriginal Australians (who have practiced for over 60,000 years) to the ancient Greeks, from West African Ifa priests to Tibetan monks, every society independently arrived at the same conclusion: sometimes, the wisest thing you can do is ask a simple question and trust a random answer.
Modern science has begun to validate what our ancestors intuitively knew. Research in decision psychology shows that random binary choices can reduce anxiety, break decision paralysis, and often lead to outcomes that feel "right" in retrospect. When we flip a coin or click a yes or no button, we are not abandoning wisdom. We are tapping into the oldest form of it.
80,000 years of yes or no. 80,000 years of asking, trusting, and acting. The tools change, the questions change, but the magic of binary decision making endures.