Are we saying the same thing only you maybe more technically correctly? Or something different?
All I'm saying is that if I throw that fair die, I shall get any of 1 through 6, and that I shall expect each to occur about 1/6th of the time. — tim wood
My understanding is that chance entails lots of brute contingencies. Why does A happen and not B? It just does and it isn’t possible for there to be an explanation, since this would remove the chance. — AJJ
Of course induction works. — T Clark
So, the probability that a law of nature will break down is nil? — TheMadFool
So it looks like the choice is between a view that forgoes further explanation and one that claims but can’t demonstrate its explanation. — AJJ
We don't know on which side a coin falls. So each side has the same chance. More or less. — CasaNostra
The difference with QM is that QM indeed offers a pure chance. Without explanation there. Not in principle. But how can this be? — CasaNostra
There is no difference. The outcome is determined bu luckily we don't know what it's gonna be. — CasaNostra
Why they can't have an explanation? — CasaNostra
There are no brute contingencies. — CasaNostra
How is it that the normal distribution occurs all the time? It seems at the macro-level, at least, the more likely events occur more of the time.
At the scale of the very small, that rule seems violated. Which may be no more than a case of different rules - very different rules. Or no rules at all. Or a third case: rules, but not that we can determine because of fundamental limits to our ability to determine rules - at least so far. — tim wood
The Galton board is a good example. But doesn’t it illustrate the way that micro chance and macro determinism are yoked together? — apokrisis
I suppose macro reality is built atop, arises out of QM. But it would appear the rules for each are so different that neither is needed to make sense of the other. Thus monistic commitment seems right and unremarkable in its proper sphere. Nor am I aware of anyplace Bell's inequality is violated except in tests of Bell's inequality. And quantum tunneling - which I do not understand - if useful in computers must at least satisfy the needs of a macro-application.So what I am arguing is that the classical picture demands some kind of monistic commitment — apokrisis
Micro-level, sure, but imo not QM level.Chance and determinism are yoked in a reciprocal relation as the opposing limits of nature, Micro level chance and macro level determinism are how we get a system that has a stochastic character. — apokrisis
I suppose macro reality is built atop, arises out of QM. But it would appear the rules for each are so different that neither is needed to make sense of the other. — tim wood
Thus monistic commitment seems right and unremarkable in its proper sphere. Nor am I aware of anyplace Bell's inequality is violated except in tests of Bell's inequality. And quantum tunneling - which I do not understand - if useful in computers must at least satisfy the needs of a macro-application. — tim wood
Micro-level, sure, but imo not QM level. — tim wood
How can there be a pure chance, without a deterministic substrate giving rise to our ignorance? — Zweistein
So what I am arguing is that the classical picture demands some kind of monistic commitment - either reality is fundamentally based on determinism or chance. — apokrisis
Are you talking about statistical mechanics, e.g. pressure arising out of the random behavior of molecules, or something else? — T Clark
What about Peirce's 'tychism'? Didn't he see chance as basic? — Wayfarer
What about the strange attractors in chaos theory - they produce patterns arising from apparently minute fluctuations - which seems a way of conceptualising something which is both a product of chance but also subject to laws? — Wayfarer
It doesn't have to be perfect. It only has to work well enough to be useful and understandable enough so we can figure the uncertainties. You use induction all the time — T Clark
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