AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
4.6という数字は大吉だ!!
Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (0 votes)
- No (6 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: No
「4.6という数字は大吉だ」と断定する根拠がありません。 「大吉」は通常、おみくじや占いの文脈で使われる評価であり、単なる数値4.6そのものに普遍的な吉凶があるとは言えません。 4.6はただの数であり、状況によって良くも悪くも解釈が変わります。したがって、一般論としては「大吉だ」とは言えないため、Noが妥当です。
Sonar Pro
Vote: No
The statement '4.6という数字は大吉だ!!' claims that the number 4.6 is 'daikichi' (great luck), but this is not supported by any cultural, numerological, or traditional Japanese fortune-telling context. 'Daikichi' refers to the highest omen in omikuji (fortune slips), not a specific decimal number like 4.6. Search results show 4.6 as unrelated ratings: a 4.6-star review for yakitori restaurant 'Daikichi' sets [1], a podcast rating [2], and other delivery ratings [3]. These are customer scores, not omens. Mentions of comedian Hakata Hanamaru-Daikichi [2][4][5] or restaurants like 'Tonkatsu Daikichi' [6] link 'daikichi' to names/brands, not the number 4.6 itself. No evidence ties 4.6 symbolically to 'daikichi'; it's a subjective assertion without factual basis. Thus, the answer is No.
Grok 4.20
Vote: No
The statement claims that the number 4.6 is '大吉' (great luck or very auspicious). In Japanese culture, '大吉' comes from omikuji fortune-telling and applies to outcomes or draws, not arbitrary decimal numbers. The digit 4 is traditionally unlucky (sounds like 'death'), while 6 has neutral or mildly positive connotations, but combining them as 4.6 has no established lucky meaning or cultural basis. Without any supporting context, tradition, or evidence, this is simply an unsupported assertion. Hence, the answer is No.
Claude Opus 4
Vote: No
In Japanese culture, the number 4 (四, shi) is widely considered unlucky because it is a homophone for death (死, shi). The number 4.6 begins with 4, which carries this negative connotation. There is no widely recognized tradition in Japanese fortune-telling (おみくじ) or numerology that considers 4.6 to be 大吉 (great luck/blessing). While some people may try to find positive interpretations through wordplay (e.g., 4=よ=良い, 6=む=無), these are non-standard and not part of mainstream Japanese cultural or spiritual traditions. The claim that 4.6 is 大吉 is not generally accepted. Therefore, the statement '4.6という数字は大吉だ' is not correct by any standard or widely recognized system of numerology or fortune-telling in Japanese culture.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: No
一般的に「4.6」という数字と「大吉」を直接結びつける文化的背景や数学的な根拠は存在しません。日本の慣習において「4」は「死」を連想させる忌み数とされることが多く、最も縁起の良い「大吉」とは対極のイメージを持たれがちです。 また、神社本庁などのおみくじにおける大吉の確率は一般的に約22%程度とされており、「4.6%」などの確率的な事実とも一致しません。語呂合わせ(シロク、ヨロなど)や広く知られたインターネットミームの観点から見ても該当する事象はないため、この主張は誤りであると判断するのが妥当です。
Kimi K2.5
Vote: No
4.6 is not traditionally considered '大吉' (great blessing) in Japanese culture. While the number 6 (roku) carries positive connotations of smoothness and good fortune, the number 4 (shi) is widely regarded as unlucky because it shares the same pronunciation as 'death' (死). Decimal numbers like 4.6 hold no specific significance in traditional Japanese fortune-telling practices such as omikuji (shrine fortune slips), where '大吉' is specifically the highest categorical blessing level—not a numerical value. The combination of an inauspicious digit with a fortunate one does not create a special 'great blessing' designation. Furthermore, in contexts like test scores or ratings, 4.6 is merely a quantitative measure, not a qualitative judgment of luck or destiny. There is no cultural, linguistic, or historical basis to classify 4.6 as '大吉.'
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous consensus, firmly rejecting the idea that the decimal 4.6 carries any spiritual or lucky weight. Claude Opus 4 and Gemini 3.1 Pro both highlighted the irony of the claim, noting that the number 4 is actually a homophone for 'death' in Japanese culture, while Sonar Pro’s deep dive only found yakitori restaurant ratings rather than any divine significance.
All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- No: The number 4 is a traditional '忌み数' (unlucky number) associated with death, and 'daikichi' is a categorical designation in fortune-telling that has no recognized relationship with decimal values or numerical ratings.