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| Best online casino / Online casino games / Roulette |
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In the old Foghorn Leghorn cartoons, during a conversation when blowhard rooster was browbeating some poor creature into seeing the world through his eyes, he blurted out the words "You can argue with me boy, but you can't argue with math". The d'Alembert Gambling System is built around this very philosophy.
French Mathematician Jean le Rond d'Alembert had the sort of intellect that would earn him a thumbs-up from such mental giants as Tesla and Einstein. Despite his massive brain pan, the man apparently had a sense of fun as well and he pointed his IQ at the problem of winning at the game of Roulette.
His strategy was something that more resembled the balance of Chinese metaphysics that is represented in the Taijitu symbol, than a product of European age of enlightenment. He based his ideas on the Law of Equilibrium which states that wins and losses will all balance out over a prolonged period of time.
To apply this balance in favor of the gambler somebody playing Roulette will increase their bet by one chip (at whatever denomination that is being played) after each loss. So if you are playing dollars, and you lose one dollar on the first spin, the next spin you bet two dollars. Each time you win, you decrease your bet by a dollar. In essence, the player is using balance as a predictable, long term, outcome, and placing bets with balance.
Many players who have tried to use this system have found out the hard way that it really does not work. For some reason though, people keep trying it. |
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