Editor of Oxford English Dictionary, Jesse Sheidlower, explains that the word ‘random’ can be described as a term meaning peculiar, strange, nonsensical, unpredictable, inexplicable, or unexpected.
The name originally started out as a noun in the 14th century and was used to refer to great speed, force, or violence in riding or running. Like in the phrases “run with great random" or “ride at random.”
In the 17th century, it meant “lacking a definite purpose.” Two hundred years later, it acquired a mathematical sense.
It was used as a highly technical definition, referring to “governed by or involving equal chances for each of the actual or hypothetical members of a population; also, produced or obtained by such a process and therefore unpredictable in detail."
The experts, or rather geeks who used this word daily turned it into slang in the 1960s after a jokey article called the students “randomized tools.” The meanings of stranger, outsider, odd, peculiar, unfamiliar, and unexpected got stuck to the word and went mainstream when it showed up in the Hacker's Dictionary.
Even though it might seem like an atypical word, randomness is a vital part of life. "Every now and then at—random—you end up with something awesome," says Charlotte McDonnell, maker of the web series Fun Science. "And this could be anything—like longer feathers, sharper teeth, bigger muscles, a giant brain, anything that can help life survive. And that is why I think randomness is so cool, because it is what gives awesome things the chance to happen."
Indeed, our life is made up of a series of random events, and we are where we are because of them. They might not always be positive but they help us to adapt and grow in ways we probably wouldn’t have otherwise. For this reason, we should embrace it and be open to new experiences. Even though our brain craves control, breaking this habit can present exciting opportunities.
Interestingly enough, in humans, randomness peaks at the age of 25, making it the perfect time to make uncalculated choices. “At age 25, people can outsmart computers at generating this kind of randomness,” said Hector Zenil, co-author of a study published in the journal PLoS Computational Biology.






















