The paint analogy presented by Metaphysician Undercover is actually a very good one. — Ergo
You have to believe that you have accounted for everything when you say “sure... you can end up with a gallon size jar filled with only white marbles if you have infinite tries” even though the average person (who knows nothing about the language of math) knows this to be and untrue statement. — Ergo
Let me point out the obvious: it is not actually provable that you can eventually end up with a jar filled with only white marbles given the physical conditions that I described. — Ergo
If slight variances in the mixture, from one jar to another are observable, what leads you to the conclusion that a jar of all one colour is possible? — Metaphysician Undercover
And this is where Ergo's mistake is: He is assuming that given the null is true we will always get an even distribution [This does not mean exactly even.], because in a fair test after all the math is done we will fail to reject the null; either 90, 95, or 99.95 (typical standards) percent of the time, but there is no always. Yes, we can use the math to approximate a normal distribution but it is called "normal" for a reason.
Here is a simple rundown of the Empirical Rule: http://www.statisticshowto.com/empirical-rule-2/ — Jeremiah
And where did you establish that only slight variations can occur over an infinite number of jars? If we say something can happen outside normal distribution then we are saying an occurrence that is not a slight variation can occur. I already went over this. — Jeremiah
The empirical rule states that for a normal distribution, nearly all of the data will fall within three standard deviations of the mean. The empirical rule can be broken down into three parts:
68% of data falls within the first standard deviation from the mean.
95% fall within two standard deviations.
99.7% fall within three standard deviations.
Something that happens outside the third standard deviation. — Jeremiah
You have to believe that you have accounted for everything when you say “sure... you can end up with a gallon size jar filled with only white marbles if you have infinite tries” — Ergo
And where did you establish that only slight variations can occur over an infinite number of jars? — Jeremiah
If we say something can happen outside normal distribution then we are saying an occurrence that is not a slight variation can occur. — Jeremiah
No it is not, as we are now talking about chemistry. Marbles are not small enough to fall in that category and behave very differently. — Jeremiah
I kind of think this discussion is at its end, Ergo's "hypothesis" has been shown to have many flaws. — Jeremiah
Observe: the same statistical math that leads you to believe that you will eventually "have to" result in a jar filled with only one color of marble (if given infinite tries) also tells us that inside of the dynamic, turbulent, swirling mass of the vat the colors of the marbles will tend to be evenly distributed inside the mass
That means that by the time that the marbles fall out of the funnel located at the bottom of the vat statistically they HAVE to already be distributed by statistical laws. As a result, it would actually defy statistical laws if at any time the statistical distribution of the colored marbles inside of the vat were as such that they would yield an entire jar's worth of marbles of only one single color. It's not just extremely unlikely that such a thing would happen, it is actually a violation of the most fundamental statistical principles. — Ergo
The laws of physics do not change between a can of paint and a gigantic clambering vat of swirling marbles. — Ergo
Saturation is the point at which a solution of a substance can dissolve no more of that substance. This point of maximum concentration, the saturation point, depends on the temperature of the liquid as well as the chemical nature of the substances involved. If a change in conditions (e.g. cooling) means that the concentration is higher than the saturation point, the solution has become 'supersaturated'.
In organic chemistry, a saturated chemical compound has no double bond or triple bond or ring. In saturated hydrocarbons, every carbon atom is attached to two hydrogen atoms, except those at the ends of the chain, which have three hydrogen atoms.
In biochemistry, the term saturation refers to the fraction of total protein binding sites that are occupied at any given time. Applies to enzymes, and molecules like haemoglobin.
In organometallic chemistry, an unsaturated complex has fewer than 18 valence electrons and thus is susceptible to oxidative addition or coordination of an additional ligand. Unsaturation is characteristic of many catalysts because it is usually a requirement for substrate activation.
It is my thinking that this particular discussion about randomness is among the most important debates in science, physics, mathematics and philosophy. — Ergo
I must also now point out that you have not actually presented any evidence to show that my original hypothesis has many flaws. You only concluded, that it does, offering no real world representations to support you opinion only more unfinished math. — Ergo
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