Saturday, 14 November 2020

'ROLL OF THE DICE', THE ORIGIN OF THIS AMAZING CUBE

Today, The Stones & The Grandma are resting in their hotel in Tierra del Fuego. 

Dani Stone has explained to his family the history of the dice, an amazing cube and a must for playing some of the most interesting games. He has explained some secrets about its creation, its shape, its weight and its material.

The family is preparing a new travel to Las Vegas, Nevada, and they want to know as things as were possible about dice and their applications.

Dice are small, throwable objects with marked sides that can rest in multiple positions. They are used for generating random numbers, commonly as part of tabletop games, including dice games, board games, role-playing games, and games of chance.

A traditional die is a cube with each of its six faces marked with a different number of dots (pips) from one to six.

When thrown or rolled, the die comes to rest showing a random integer from one to six on its upper surface, with each value being equally likely. Dice may also have polyhedral or irregular shapes and may have faces marked with numerals or symbols instead of pips. Loaded dice are designed to favor some results over others for cheating or entertainment.

Dice have been used since before recorded history, and it is uncertain where they originated. It is theorized that dice developed from the practice of fortune-telling with the talus of hoofed animals, colloquially known as knucklebones.

More information: JTOR Daily

The Egyptian game of senet was played with flat two-sided throwsticks which indicated the number of squares a player could move, and thus functioned as a form of dice. Senet was played before 3000 BC and up to the 2nd century AD.

Perhaps the oldest known dice were excavated as part of a backgammon-like game set at the Burnt City, an archeological site in south-eastern Iran, estimated to be from between 2800 and 2500 BC.

Bone dice from Skara Brae have been dated to 3100–2400 BC. Excavations from graves at Mohenjo-daro, an Indus Valley civilization settlement, unearthed terracotta dice dating to 2500–1900 BC.

Games involving dice are mentioned in the ancient Indian Rigveda, Atharvaveda, Mahabharata and Buddhist games list.

There are several biblical references to casting lots (Hebrew: יפילו גורל‎ yappîlū ḡōrāl), as in Psalm 22, indicating that dicing or a related activity was commonplace when the psalm was composed.

Knucklebones was a game of skill played in ancient Greece; a derivative form had the four sides of bones receive different values like modern dice.

Although gambling was illegal, many Romans were passionate gamblers who enjoyed dicing, which was known as aleam ludere, to play at dice. There were two sizes of Roman dice. Tali were large dice inscribed with one, three, four, and six on four sides. Tesserae were smaller dice with sides numbered from one to six. Twenty-sided dice date back to the 2nd century AD and from Ptolemaic Egypt as early as the 2nd century BC.

Dominoes and playing cards originated in China as developments from dice. The transition from dice to playing cards occurred in China around the Tang dynasty, and coincides with the technological transition from rolls of manuscripts to block printed books.

In Japan, dice were used to play a popular game called sugoroku. There are two types of sugoroku. Ban-sugoroku is similar to backgammon and dates to the Heian period, while e-sugoroku is a racing game.

Dice are thrown onto a surface either from the hand or from a container designed for this such as a cup or tray. The face of the die that is uppermost when it comes to rest provides the value of the throw.

The result of a die roll is determined by the way it is thrown, according to the laws of classical mechanics. A die roll is made random by uncertainty in minor factors such as tiny movements in the thrower's hand; they are thus a crude form of hardware random number generator.

One typical contemporary dice game is craps, where two dice are thrown simultaneously and wagers are made on the total value of the two dice.

Dice are frequently used to introduce randomness into board games, where they are often used to decide the distance through which a piece will move along the board, as in backgammon and Monopoly.

More information: Inside Science

Common dice are small cubes, most often 1.6 cm across, whose faces are numbered from one to six, usually by patterns of round dots called pips. While the use of Arabic numerals is occasionally seen, such dice are less common.

Opposite sides of a modern die traditionally add up to seven, requiring the 1, 2, and 3 faces to share a vertex. The faces of a die may be placed clockwise or counterclockwise about this vertex. If the 1, 2, and 3 faces run counterclockwise, the die is called right-handed. If those faces run clockwise, the die is called left-handed. Western dice are normally right-handed, and Chinese dice are normally left-handed.

The pips on standard six-sided dice are arranged in specific patterns as shown. Asian style dice bear similar patterns to Western ones, but the pips are closer to the center of the face; in addition, the pips are differently sized on Asian style dice, and the pips are colored red on the 1 and 4 sides. Red fours may be of Indian origin.

More information: Popular Mechanics

The word die comes from Old French ; from Latin datum, something which is given or played.

While the terms ace, deuce, trey, cater, cinque and sice are generally obsolete, with the names of the numbers preferred, they are still used by some professional gamblers to designate different sides of the dice. Ace is from the Latin as, meaning a unit; the others are 2 to 6 in Old French.

The term snake eyes is the outcome of rolling the dice and getting only one pip on each die. The Online Etymology Dictionary traces use of the term as far back as 1919.

The term boxcars, also known as midnight, is the outcome of rolling the dice and getting a six on each die. The pair of six pips resembles a pair of boxcars on a freight train.

More information: Science Alert


You can blow on the dice all you want,
but whether they come up 'seven' is still
a function of random luck.

Barry Ritholtz

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