Thankfully in the case of flipping coins both theoretical and experimental probabilities can be easily calculated. If the experimental probability deviates from the theoretical probability by a significant amount (either too many heads or too many tails than expected) we are justified to suspect the coin is biased/loaded. — TheMadFool
You are only justified in thinking the coin is PROBABLY loaded. As you know, there is no such thing as a finite sequence of tosses incompatible with either fairness or bias. — tom
You are problematic in three areas. You assume miracles (not just statistically unlikely events, but a disruption of the natural order) actually have occurred. You commit the gambler's fallacy by saying we are do for events to happen if we assume so statistical occurrence of miracles. The entire argument you present is effectively a diversion: the line of reasoning you argue for does not even apply in the case of miracles. Even if we believe miracles have occurred, we have no reason to believe they occur again at all, especially with any frequency. — Chany
So, theoretical probability of a head = 1 ÷ 2 = 50% — TheMadFool
Firstly I'm happy that you more or less agree with me regarding the nature of the gambler's fallacy - that it isn't fallacious over large observational data showing biased data points. — TheMadFool
Littlewood's law refers to the type of "miracles" of unlikely chances — Chany
Although it seems to me that if the probability of getting heads or tails is really 50%, then if we have a bunch of one side in a row, that should increase the odds of getting the other side on a subsequent throw. Why am I thinking this? Well, for the 50% to have any real significance, it needs to be referring to what happens over a series of throws, where the more throws there are, the closer the data set gets to 50% for either side. Otherwise, how in the world would we be arriving at the 50% figure in th first place? — Terrapin Station
Assuming a causal influence of preceding trials on subsequent trials would go directly against those assumptions. — SophistiCat
If you shouldn't see an inordinate number of heads then it is reasonable to expect a tail to even out the outcomes.
So, it is reasonable to expect a tail to even out the outcomes — TheMadFool
Jesus' miracles, even if they can be assigned statistical numbers, would be so astronomically large to occur that we should not expect to see them. — Chany
In short, we have good reason to believe that Jesus' like miracles are not based on statistics, but careful planning by God. — Chany
Notice how we shifted from trying to validate the gambler's fallacy to defending something else entirely. — Chany
This is the gambler's fallacy. You believe the 50/50 chance ratio is some magical causal power that the universe must equal out. It is not. A single coin flip is 50/50 heads or tails. Every coin flip has the same chance of being either heads or tails. Previous coin flips have no causal bearing on the outcome of the next coin flip. Therefore, if we flip a fair coin and it lands heads 100 times prior, the likelihood of the 101st coin flip landing heads or tails is still 50 percent each. — Chany
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