I used to think so, but then I read about the gameshow question with 3 doors (like off of 21) and realized you can actually use data from random outcomes to predict future outcomes...
What do you mean by true randomness?When I think true randomness I think of there being no logic to it.With math, basically being logic, I'd think not.
Quote from: SexyPiranha on November 17, 2014, 09:51:11 AMWhat do you mean by true randomness?When I think true randomness I think of there being no logic to it.With math, basically being logic, I'd think not.Huh, that's a lot more difficult a question to answer than I imagined. No method of predicting an outcome based on any form of algorithm? I swear there was a distinct difference to unpredictability that I came up with before...Now that you mention it, wouldn't a simplification be "events occur without any causation?" Hmmm...
Heisenberg's Uncertainty implies a randomness to behavior of subatomic particles, and quantum mechanics necessitates randomness at a quantum level. Radioactive decay is also a random process.But in typical day-to-day stuff? No, everything has a cause and effect, but the inability to perceive those causes leads to labeling something as random.
I guess if we're distinguishing between uncertainty and randomness, I'd have to say that a true, pure randomness probably doesn't exist. Third law, bruh. Everything has an impulse for it's behavior, regardless of how observable it is. But there's plenty of other cases where randomness in more vernacular sense is appropriate, like I in statistics. We typically call something stochastic or random when its cause is indeterminate or beyond the scope of the research. It doesn't follow a uniform behavior, but it does follow a definable probability distribution.
I don't think humans can make true randomness, but the universe is completely random in what it does.http://fractalfoundation.org/resources/what-is-chaos-theory/
Quote from: Numb Digger on November 17, 2014, 03:27:06 PMI don't think humans can make true randomness, but the universe is completely random in what it does.http://fractalfoundation.org/resources/what-is-chaos-theory/Surely that doesn't make sense. Humans aren't apart or separate from the functioning of the Universe at a fundamental level.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on November 17, 2014, 03:30:38 PMQuote from: Numb Digger on November 17, 2014, 03:27:06 PMI don't think humans can make true randomness, but the universe is completely random in what it does.http://fractalfoundation.org/resources/what-is-chaos-theory/Surely that doesn't make sense. Humans aren't apart or separate from the functioning of the Universe at a fundamental level.You are right. I refute what I said. Sleep deprivation makes one not think correctly. Still though, Chaos Theory is worth a read to those interested in randomness.
Quote from: Numb Digger on November 17, 2014, 03:37:55 PMQuote from: Meta Cognition on November 17, 2014, 03:30:38 PMQuote from: Numb Digger on November 17, 2014, 03:27:06 PMI don't think humans can make true randomness, but the universe is completely random in what it does.http://fractalfoundation.org/resources/what-is-chaos-theory/Surely that doesn't make sense. Humans aren't apart or separate from the functioning of the Universe at a fundamental level.You are right. I refute what I said. Sleep deprivation makes one not think correctly. Still though, Chaos Theory is worth a read to those interested in randomness.I wouldn't call chaotic systems, in the theoretical sense, random. From moment to moment, considered as individual subsystems they can appear quite predictable but considered over a whole the system becomes quite unstable and unpredictable. This is simply due to the highly non-linear nature of chaotic systems and heavy dependence on initial conditions of the relevant variables.
the one true God is Doctor Doom and we should all be worshiping him.