We are pattern seeking creatures, and much of the quality of the life we live will be determined by how and why we seek patterns. Pattern seeking can lead us into delusion and dark obsession or inspiration and revelation depending on how we employ it.
If you look online, most of what you will find about pattern seeking is posted by ersatz skeptics who view it as a disreputable, superstitious tendency. The original Skeptics were a school of Greek philosophers who felt that their powers of observation were increased by not arriving at conclusions. In other words, they consciously held back from fixing on patterns which would lead to premature closure of the discovery process. Ironically, most so-called skeptics follow the opposite of this philosophy and are more properly called debunkers. They begin with a rigid pattern fixed in their minds — their unproven notion of what's possible and what's not (anything paranormal). Typically, they do research by proclamation and rather than investigate the unexplained they explain the uninvestigated.
Although their method of pattern seeking is intrinsically flawed, so also is the pattern seeking of many occultists and conspiracy folk. They too begin with patterns engraved in their minds and look for signs, symbols and synchronicities to confirm their belief systems. The so-called skeptics are true believers in a negative (a set of apriori assumptions of what's not possible), and the foolishly obsessed are true believers in a positive. The ersatz skeptics conflate science for scientism, and the deluded obsessives are seduced by the trickster aspect of the unconscious.
When studying certain things, for example, the efficacy of a new medicine, rigorous research methodology and statistical analysis are called for in order to avoid confirmation bias. However, in other cases, the scientific method does not and cannot work — e.g. choosing which politician to vote for. You should still engage rigorous reality testing, however, and consider the reliability of various sources of information. In still other cases — sifting through the ambiguities of a relationship, or choosing a life path, for example — there is a high, irreducible degree of subjectivity. Global intuition needs to play a leading role in selecting among possible patterns. In such cases, methodology is not the predominant factor so much as a qualitative truth sense. The only method is to wait for such deeper, intuitive recogntion and not allow a mind-ego alliance to create premature closure on a more superficial answer. (see "The Hierarchy of Psychic Functions" in
A Guide to the Perplexed Interdimensional Traveler)
In still other cases, it may be life-enhancing to choose to impose a pattern onto a phenomenon where other patterns are not only possible but some are even more statistically likely or "realistic." I discuss this approach in
Interpretive Magic.
Using an oracle, such as this one, is also a case of pattern seeking. For the phony skeptic, oracles are purely apophenia, finding patterns among random data. Oracular advice is so general, they would argue, that you can always make something fit your situation. Even if this were the case, the general advice in oracles could still be valuable. Whichever part of the general advice was most relevant to you would be highlighted by your intuition so that you would, in effect, be your own oracle. On the other side of the spectrum, there are those who will treat every message from an oracle as if it were the voice of God. From the point of view of my philosophy,
Dynamic Paradoxicalism, it would be best to have a sliding or dynamic relation to the poles of this spectrum. As I've written in the
Zap Oracle Instructions and History, my experience with all oracles is that there are zones of time where it seems like it could all be random and other zones where reading after reading will have incredible precision and relevance.
Ultimately, it is your own discernment, your own sense of truth, that has the responsibility of deciding which patterns you are going to select. For this reason I believe the highlighter is more sacred than any text (see
The Path of the Sacred Highlighter). Your highlighter (what your truth sense highlights) is the authority, and not the text, oracle, guru, governmental, academic or scientific agency. Consider this a propitious time to wield your pattern recognition highlighter with all your powers of discernment.