How to interpret the tarot cards of Karnassus

**On Interpretation**

 

No one truly remembers what the cards originally meant.

 

That, too, is part of their power.

 

It is not only the draw that introduces luck, but the interpretation. Where one observer sees a rising card as a sign of ascension, another reads it as a warning against it—a signal not to rise, not to act, not to fly.

 

Meaning does not reside in the card.

It emerges in the encounter.

 

This divergence is not a flaw in the system. It is the system.

 

If every card had a fixed and universally agreed meaning, then interpretation itself would become predictable—and therefore exploitable. By allowing meaning to shift between minds, contexts, and moments, the Tarot preserves the same essential quality it was designed to protect: unpredictability.

 

For this reason, it must be understood that any account of the Tarot—including the one that follows—is not authoritative.

 

It is merely one path through the cards.

 

What I offer here is not the meaning of the Tarot of Karnassus.

 

 

It is only my own.

Why are Karnassans so obsessed with luck

**An Introduction to the Tarot of Karnassus**

 

The idea that one of the galaxy’s most advanced civilizations would be defined by the use of tarot seems, at first glance, absurd. How could a people capable of traversing interstellar distances, bending time, and modeling reality with near-perfect precision place such cultural weight on something that appears, to us, indistinguishable from mysticism?

 

How could a civilization of such predictive power enshrine, at the heart of its popular wisdom, a simple phrase printed at the beginning of every deck:

 

**“Stay lucky.”**

 

The answer is not mystical. It is strategic.

 

At lower levels of development, intelligence is power. The ability to predict outcomes, model systems, and anticipate rivals confers overwhelming advantage. But beyond a certain threshold, prediction becomes a liability. When both you and your competitors possess extraordinary predictive capabilities, your decisions become legible. Your logic can be mapped. Your strategies can be anticipated, countered, or pre-empted entirely.

 

Perfect reasoning becomes a pattern.

And patterns can be exploited.

 

The more completely you can predict, the more completely you can be predicted.

 

The civilizations of the 5K system discovered this limit early—and treated it not as a flaw, but as a structural vulnerability. Their solution was neither superstition nor surrender to chaos, but the deliberate and disciplined integration of irreducible uncertainty into every meaningful decision.

 

This is the function of the Tarot of Karnassus.

 

Before any significant action—personal, political, or military—a draw is made. Not to determine the decision, but to disrupt it. The outcome introduces an element that cannot be modeled, anticipated, or reverse-engineered by an opponent. It fractures the clean lines of logic just enough to prevent total predictability.

 

It is not guidance.

It is interference.

 

Over time, this practice proved devastatingly effective. Strategies shaped by controlled randomness resisted modeling. Plans survived contact with adversaries who would otherwise have dismantled them in advance. Entire systems became harder to dominate, not because they were less intelligent, but because they refused to become fully knowable.

 

What began as a rational constraint became a cultural constant.

 

From there, it spread.

 

What was once reserved for war rooms and high councils began to infiltrate ordinary life. Personal decisions, relationships, careers—even moments of hesitation or doubt—came to be touched, however lightly, by the same principle: no path should ever be so refined that it becomes inevitable.

 

Luck moved from strategy into philosophy.

 

It acquired names.

 

**Luck the Leveler.**

Because no ascent is permanent.

 

**Luck the Limiter.**

Because no power is without boundary.

 

It became widely understood that luck would, sooner or later, break any structure that grew too rigid, humble any mind that grew too certain. Great figures—leaders, thinkers, architects of entire eras—were not feared for their power alone, but for what would happen when luck finally intervened. And it always did.

 

Not as punishment.

Not as justice.

But as function.

 

Hubris was not morally wrong in their eyes—it was structurally unstable. Luck would find it, the way pressure finds a fault line.

 

In this sense, luck was not merely useful. It was essential.

 

Because beyond strategy, beyond competition, beyond survival itself, the people of the 5K system came to a quieter, more unsettling conclusion:

 

Without luck, they would cease to be human.

 

A perfectly predictable being does not choose—it executes.

A perfectly controlled life does not unfold—it proceeds.

 

Luck restores interruption. Surprise. Error. Timing.

It reintroduces the possibility that something may happen which was neither intended nor foreseen.

 

And in that gap, something like humanity persists.

 

To the casual outsider—and sometimes even the seasoned academic—it can appear that luck is worshiped as a god.

 

It is not.

 

Luck holds no throne in Carnassan thought. It commands no prayers, accepts no offerings, and promises nothing. It is neither benevolent nor cruel.

 

Luck is an imp.

 

Not vast, not terrible, not sublime.

 

Small.

 

The mouse that startles a general at the wrong moment.

The child who asks the question no model accounted for.

The buffoon who trips and breaks the chain of events that would have crowned a tyrant.

 

There is nothing grand about it. That is precisely why it cannot be resisted.

 

Luck arrives in the absurd, the trivial, the forgotten—because those are the places no intelligence fully secures. And it is from those places that the mighty fall, the clever misstep, and the inevitable unravels.

 

This is why any truly advanced civilization, in both technology and philosophy, must ultimately embrace luck. Not as comfort, but as constraint. Not as hope, but as certainty.

 

Because luck is the final force that destroys hubris.

 

When a Carnassan ambassador takes leave of a tyrant and offers that common farewell—**“Stay lucky”**—the tyrant hears a blessing.

 

The ambassador smiles, for she means nothing of the sort.

 

Or perhaps she does.

 

That ambiguity—the knife-edge between fortune and downfall—is not a

flaw in their philosophy. It is its most refined expression.

 

Welcome to the Tarot of Karnassus.