Sod's law is a name for
the axiom that "if something can go wrong, it will", with the further
addendum, in British culture, that it will happen at "the worst possible
time". This may simply be construed, again in British culture, as "hope
for the best, expect the worst"
The
phrase is seemingly derived, at least in part, from the colloquialism an
"unlucky sod"; a term for someone who has had some bad unlucky
experience, and is usually used as a sympathetic reference to the person
Sod's law is similar to,
but broader than, Murphy's law ("Whatever can go wrong, will go
wrong"). For example, concepts such as "bad fortune will be tailored
to the individual" and "good fortune will occur in spite of the
individual's actions" are sometimes given as examples of Sod's law in
action. This would broaden Sod's law to a general sense of being "mocked
by fate". In these aspects it is similar to some definitions of irony,
particularly the irony of fate. Murphy's technological origin on John Stapp's
Project MX981 is more upbeat—it was a reminder to the engineers and team
members to be cautious and make sure everything was accounted for, to let no
stone be left unturned—not an acceptance of an uncaring uninfluenceable fate.
According to David J.
Hand, emeritus professor of mathematics and senior research investigator at
Imperial College London, Sod's law is a more extreme version of Murphy's law. While
Murphy's Law says that anything that can go wrong, will go wrong (eventually),
Sod's law requires that it always go wrong with the worst possible outcome. Hand suggests that belief in Sod's law
is a combination of the law of truly large numbers and the psychological effect
of the law of selection. The former says we should expect things to go wrong
now and then, and the latter says we remember the exceptional events where
something went wrong, but the great number of mundane events where nothing
exceptional happened are forgotten.
Examples
"When you toss a coin, the more
strongly you want heads, the more likely it is to come up tails"—Richard
Dawkins
"Traffic lights turn red when you're
in a hurry, or your e-mail crashes just as you are about to hit 'send' on that
critical message"—David Hand
"...a composer such as Beethoven loses
his hearing, or a drummer such as Rick Allen...loses an arm in a car
crash"—David Hand
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