Science, asked by mohammadpathan5164, 3 months ago

The science of predicting one's future.

Answers

Answered by brajmannayak
4

Answer:

An actuary uses actuarial science to assess and predict future business risk, such that the risk(s) can be mitigated. For example, in insurance an actuary would use a life table (which incorporates the historical experience of mortality rates and sometimes an estimate of future trends) to project life expectancy.

Answered by tushargupta0691
1

Answer:

Precognition.

Explanation:

  • Precognition is the purported psychic phenomenon of seeing or becoming directly aware of future events.
  • There is no accepted scientific evidence that precognition exists, and it is widely regarded as pseudoscience. Precognition contradicts the causality principle, which states that an effect cannot occur before its cause.
  • Throughout history, many people have believed in precognition. Despite the lack of scientific evidence, many people believe it is real; it is still widely reported and a topic of research and debate within the parapsychology community. Precognition is sometimes treated as an example of the broader phenomenon of prescience or foreknowledge, which is the ability to understand what is likely to happen in the future through any means.
  • It differs from premonition, which is a vague sense of impending disaster. Throughout history, related activities such as predictive prophecy and fortune telling have been practiced.

Thus this is the answer.

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