Wrong.It can only mean that out of 6 times rolling the dice, the 6 will occur one time, right? — spirit-salamander
If it is impossible to get a 6 on the second throw, then the probability of getting 6 on the second throw is 0, not 1/6. And if the probability of getting a 6 on the second throw is 0, you're not really tossing a fair die. The probability of getting a 6 on any throw of a fair die toss is 1/6... so your angels aren't tossing a die.The only surprise for the angels, which there must be if it is to be a game of chance, would be that on the second roll they absolutely cannot tell whether the second roll will be 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. — spirit-salamander
Your theory is flawed though. If this is a fair die, the probability of it landing on each number is 1/6 on every throw.In a merely practical or pragmatic sense it would be a fallacy, but not in a theoretical one. — spirit-salamander
That would almost never happen with fair die. But it could happen. But you're confusing the theoretical probability with frequentist probability here.It could be here that for all eternity only the 6 is always rolled or that it never appears for all times. In the former case the probability for 6 would be 100%, in the latter 0%. — spirit-salamander
As @InPitzotl makes clear, but in some fewer words, if a surety, then not a probability.The 1/6 probability for each individual die roll becomes a 1/6 surety. — spirit-salamander
If an angel now rolls the dice and the 6 appears, then everyone knows that in the next 5 rolls no more 6 will come. — spirit-salamander
How would you philosophically explain and describe the probability 1/6 in the dice rolls. What is the 1 here, what is the 6 and what / and how do they relate to the real world?
I have come to the conclusion that it is all very baffling and perplexing because you get to questions of chance and determination. — spirit-salamander
6 is the cardinality of the set of possible outcomes; that set is the event space. 1 is the particular outcome, which is one of the members of the event space. Division expresses the ratio of the particular outcome to the possible outcomes. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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