Replace luck with chance and you might have something to go on. Preparedness for opportunities is often confused with luck.
Luck assumes some sort of organizing agent, methinks.
I would rather be persistent and ready than just plain lucky.
It still is a handy, if misleading, term.
Pangloss
If we properly plan everything work hard towards our goal, to succeed in what we do, still we need good luck?
Good luck I found it, bad luck for he who lost it:smile:Ok, when we walk on the road assume we get some 100$, what will you call that.
Without our effort if we get anything that is luck. Can we conclude in this way?
If we properly plan everything work hard towards our goal, to succeed in what we do, still we need good luck?
If someone doesn't put themself in a position to capitalize they will never be "lucky". I know a guy who seems like the luckiest guy in the world (even won a lottery but that's only the start of it) but when when you peel away the onion and look at his life he easily puts himself in better chances to succeed than others. Mostly work and perseverance."Good fortune"..."Luck" ..."Happenstance (favorable and otherwise) is all relative in nature. Hard work, discipline perseverance and a facility to capitalize on advantages and opportunities is the key to "success".
I agree, but when it comes to the lottery it's all luck/fate/chanceIf someone doesn't put themself in a position to capitalize they will never be "lucky". I know a guy who seems like the luckiest guy in the world (even won a lottery but that's only the start of it) but when when you peel away the onion and look at his life he easily puts himself in better chances to succeed than others. Mostly work and perseverance.
To me if it's not luck then it's fateLester:
There is, of course, the definition supplied by your dictionary (but the Encarta? Please get a better one, for your own sake), and then there is the sense of the word as I was using it, and indeed as is suggested by the title of this thread, and the OP:
"If we properly plan everything work hard towards our goal, to succeed in what we do, still we need good luck?"
The question, to my reading, asks if there is any need for that strange attractor of good fortune, "luck." Luck, in this sense, is that thing that appears to be more than random chance when someone has 3 winning lottery tickets in a row, or gets a great job, or the last parking space.
My point is that appearances deceive - chance is chance is chance, and our colloquial idea of luck is an illusion.
My reading could be completely wrong, of course.
Pangloss