Extended-Phenotype
Unpredictability, yes.
randomness, no.
lolwut
by winchester_royal » 19 Jun 2013 13:21
Extended-Phenotype
Unpredictability, yes.
randomness, no.
by Extended-Phenotype » 19 Jun 2013 13:24
winchester_royalExtended-Phenotype
Unpredictability, yes.
randomness, no.
lolwut
by fruits » 19 Jun 2013 14:35
by Extended-Phenotype » 19 Jun 2013 14:40
by MouldyRoyal » 19 Jun 2013 14:41
creative_username_1MouldyRoyal
Agreed, I don't believe in luck in as much as I do believe in statistics.
As a data scientist (thats what they bill it as these days) i totally believe that luck/randomness plays a much
bigger part in life than people suspect.
by Extended-Phenotype » 19 Jun 2013 14:49
MouldyRoyalcreative_username_1MouldyRoyal
Agreed, I don't believe in luck in as much as I do believe in statistics.
As a data scientist (thats what they bill it as these days) i totally believe that luck/randomness plays a much
bigger part in life than people suspect.
Randomness? But of course. The problem, for me, is that some people talk about luck as though it is some sort of force or personality trait. Neither of which I like at all, and I guess neither would you.
In other words, the idea that someone would be better at rolling dice than someone else annoys me, but it's the way some people think. It may be luck that means someone wins the lottery or so on, but only is as much as an unlikely event has happened to a specific someone. The fact that someone has won it, is not luck at all.
Ergh, I am making no sense here.
by creative_username_1 » 19 Jun 2013 14:50
melonhead in a complex multifaceted system like football games, where there are a million random factors influencing all players on both teams, and the ball, and the ref it has less effect than youd think and theyll all just even themselves out over a whole season
people make the mistake of taking each game as one occurence and saying 46 isnt enough to make randomness irrelevant.
when actually its each of the thousands of individual factors in each game that should be counted, meaning the sample size is much bigger.
no ones saying it isnt a factor, just saying its not the determining factor over a season,
and it affects both sides equally over the time scales/number of individual random events involved in a football season,
by creative_username_1 » 19 Jun 2013 15:01
Extended-Phenotype
The roll of a dice isn't random. It's governed by determinable factors such as spin, speed, impact, which direction the dice is 'facing' to begin with, air-resistance, surface consistency and so on.
Winning the lottery isn't random either.
by melonhead » 19 Jun 2013 15:08
creative_username_1melonhead in a complex multifaceted system like football games, where there are a million random factors influencing all players on both teams, and the ball, and the ref it has less effect than youd think and theyll all just even themselves out over a whole season
people make the mistake of taking each game as one occurence and saying 46 isnt enough to make randomness irrelevant.
when actually its each of the thousands of individual factors in each game that should be counted, meaning the sample size is much bigger.
no ones saying it isnt a factor, just saying its not the determining factor over a season,
and it affects both sides equally over the time scales/number of individual random events involved in a football season,
Don't have any any evidence to suggest how luck/beneficial randomness would be distributed. I would assume it would be normally
distributed amongst teams rather than cancelled out as you've assumed/stated.
Always reluctant to get involved in any argument that can't be proved/tested
by melonhead » 19 Jun 2013 15:10
creative_username_1Extended-Phenotype
The roll of a dice isn't random. It's governed by determinable factors such as spin, speed, impact, which direction the dice is 'facing' to begin with, air-resistance, surface consistency and so on.
Winning the lottery isn't random either.
So if you have all the available information you are able to determine how the dice/die lands? .
by creative_username_1 » 19 Jun 2013 15:14
melonheadcreative_username_1Extended-Phenotype
The roll of a dice isn't random. It's governed by determinable factors such as spin, speed, impact, which direction the dice is 'facing' to begin with, air-resistance, surface consistency and so on.
Winning the lottery isn't random either.
So if you have all the available information you are able to determine how the dice/die lands? .
id imagine so.
its just that to obtain all the information youd need some sort of super ridiculous super computer
by creative_username_1 » 19 Jun 2013 15:16
melonhead
cancelled out between teams, as the randomness will be distrbuted with a normal distribution across all the teams involved
by Extended-Phenotype » 19 Jun 2013 15:31
creative_username_1Extended-Phenotype
The roll of a dice isn't random. It's governed by determinable factors such as spin, speed, impact, which direction the dice is 'facing' to begin with, air-resistance, surface consistency and so on.
Winning the lottery isn't random either.
So if you have all the available information you are able to determine how the dice/die lands? So you're going to need information on every particle in the universe to be accurate and at particle level there are elements of probability (I know very little on the physics of this, i'm sure someone on here does).
by creative_username_1 » 19 Jun 2013 15:37
Extended-Phenotypecreative_username_1Extended-Phenotype
The roll of a dice isn't random. It's governed by determinable factors such as spin, speed, impact, which direction the dice is 'facing' to begin with, air-resistance, surface consistency and so on.
Winning the lottery isn't random either.
So if you have all the available information you are able to determine how the dice/die lands? So you're going to need information on every particle in the universe to be accurate and at particle level there are elements of probability (I know very little on the physics of this, i'm sure someone on here does).
As Heisenberg wrote:
"The invisible elementary particle of modern physics does not have the property of occupying space any more than it has properties like color and solidity. Fundamentally, it is not a material structure in space and time but only a symbol that allows the laws of nature to be expressed in especially simple form."
Quantum mechanics is not random, even if it is the way in which we use it to make our calculations. The Schrodinger equation of QM is totally deterministic: the wave equation, which describes a quantum system, evolves through that equation in a deterministic, non-random, way.
The only limit to how precise your predictions are is how well you can measure things, and something being unmeasurable does not make it random.
Thread derailed.
by melonhead » 19 Jun 2013 15:52
creative_username_1melonheadcreative_username_1
So if you have all the available information you are able to determine how the dice/die lands? .
id imagine so.
its just that to obtain all the information youd need some sort of super ridiculous super computer
did you read the next sentence.
by melonhead » 19 Jun 2013 15:53
creative_username_1melonhead
cancelled out between teams, as the randomness will be distrbuted with a normal distribution across all the teams involved
I don't agree. If one of us is prepared to put the research in then hairy muff. If you want to get the last word in on this, be my guest
by Extended-Phenotype » 19 Jun 2013 16:01
creative_username_1Extended-Phenotype
As Heisenberg wrote:
"The invisible elementary particle of modern physics does not have the property of occupying space any more than it has properties like color and solidity. Fundamentally, it is not a material structure in space and time but only a symbol that allows the laws of nature to be expressed in especially simple form."
Quantum mechanics is not random, even if it is the way in which we use it to make our calculations. The Schrodinger equation of QM is totally deterministic: the wave equation, which describes a quantum system, evolves through that equation in a deterministic, non-random, way.
The only limit to how precise your predictions are is how well you can measure things, and something being unmeasurable does not make it random.
Thread derailed.
depends who you believe then....and how you can use it IRL
by SPARTA » 19 Jun 2013 16:54
by AirRaidSiren » 19 Jun 2013 18:10
SPARTA So, while Brian McBirdmott weighs up moves for Noel and Stephen Hunt, we sign Bridge and Drenthe. Anyone still unsure he should have gone?
by winchester_royal » 19 Jun 2013 18:55
SPARTA we sign Bridge and Drenthe.
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