I'm not sure that God could play dice. — andrewk
Randomness isn't an absence of any pattern. Most things which can be considered as random have patterns. The basic example is a fair coin, flipping it gives you 50% chance of heads and 50% chance of tails. So it's a random outcome, but the generating process for the random outcomes has properties that can be analysed and accounted for - in principle anyway. — fdrake
Except that the mathematical concept of 'random' doesn't apply to strings of symbols. The concept normal can be used instead, but the expansion of pi is believed to be normal, although IIRC that has not been proved. As to whether the philosophical concept of random applies to them - we'll have to defer that question until somebody comes up with a non-circular, non-epistemological, non-word-saladish concept.A string such as 11001001000011111101101010100010001000010110100011000010001101001100010011000110011000101000101110000000110111000001110011010001... seems random, but it's not. If you put a decimal point after the first two 1's, this is the binary expansion of pi. So the recipe, "Write pi in binary and drop the decimal point" deterministically generates this string. — fishfry
Who here can be satisfied with an "explanation" of.. "Oh it's just random" ..? — Jake Tarragon
fair coin flips — fdrake
Who here can be satisfied with an "explanation" of.. "Oh it's just random" ..? — Jake Tarragon
I don't understand your post, but I like it nevertheless. It sounds zen. — andrewk
I suspect you are the only person in the world to use that definition. For the rest of us, circular reasoning is where the conclusion is used as a premise.A circular reasoning is one in which the assumption or premise plays a vital role in the system. — szardosszemagad
I can be happy with an explanation that it is 'just random' by understanding the mechanism of the random number generator from which it arises (or realising that there is one). — MikeL
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.