Libertarians believe that free will is incompatible with determinism (the view that all events are causally determined by prior conditions). For an action to be truly free, they argue, it must be undetermined — the agent must have genuine alternatives.
Motion creates friction, and friction creates sparks. Sitting on your couch waiting for a lucky break ensures nothing happens. By constantly creating, writing, building, or practicing, you force yourself into the path of random, positive events. 2. Telling (The Megaphone of Luck)
Monotony kills luck. Change your commute route, read a book from a genre you hate, or eat at a restaurant you have never tried. Minor disruptions alter your brain's neural patterns and expose you to new stimuli. 4. Send "Cold Praises" lucky paradox guide
A "Stat Planner" that displays which jobs (Waiter, Cook, or Marketing) or events currently benefit most from your current stats.
Never take risks that can completely eliminate you from the game (e.g., financial bankruptcy or reputational ruin). Libertarians believe that free will is incompatible with
Initiate brief, polite conversations with people in coffee shops, elevators, or planes. You never know who holds the missing piece to a puzzle you are trying to solve.
Hidden genius rarely gets lucky. Share your projects, lessons learned, and daily challenges on public platforms. This creates digital nodes that allow stranger-to-stranger serendipity to occur. Say "Yes" Early, Say "No" Late Sitting on your couch waiting for a lucky
But before the fact, we couldn't predict any of it. Hindsight flattens complexity into causality. It turns a thousand random variables into a tidy story.