Oracolo Si E No _top_ (2025)
These questions, when posed to a Yes/No oracle (coin, pendulum, app, or card), seem ill-suited for a binary response. Yet millions of consultations occur daily. The Oracolo sì e no – as it is known in Italian folk tradition – is often dismissed as a childish game. However, its persistence demands analysis. Why does a culture steeped in probabilistic thinking still turn to a device that offers only two poles? The binary oracle is not a modern invention. In ancient Greece, the astragaloi (knucklebones) were thrown and interpreted as yes/no or “favorable/unfavorable” based on which side landed up. The Roman Sortes involved drawing lots with pre‑written answers; many surviving examples read simply “Do it” or “Avoid it.”