There's either a riot or there's not. 50/50Marter said:Man, I remember when Corner Gas did a gag on this.
Anyway, it's 1/7,000,000,000, as the number of possibilities doesn't equate to the probability that one of them is chosen.
There's either a riot or there's not. 50/50Marter said:Man, I remember when Corner Gas did a gag on this.
Anyway, it's 1/7,000,000,000, as the number of possibilities doesn't equate to the probability that one of them is chosen.
It's more complex than is generally acknowledged. Dependence is a philosophically difficult notion. We generally assume that "Whenever A, then not B" type examples are good enough to make the general point, but this rests on (admittedly useful) classical assumptions about the logical division of states when people are more combinatorial and intuitionist than that.SirBryghtside said:No. Just... no. I shouldn't even have to explain this. No one should.
UNKNOWNINCOGNITO said:My argument is that it would 50/50 of it being my friend since the process is random and no one is favoured in anyway so it is either it is him or it is not him.
The 2 given probabilities are BOTH correct but for DIFFERENT events.UNKNOWNINCOGNITO said:Okay I've been trying to wrap my head around this and cannot make exact logical sense in it. If I were to push a button and the result of doing so shall randomly kill a person in the world what are the chances of it being my best friend ?
My argument is that it would 50/50 of it being my friend since the process is random and no one is favoured in anyway so it is either it is him or it is not him.
2 friends of mine instead say that the chances are 1 to 7 billion (assuming there are still 7 billion people on earth) that someone I know shall get axed from the random process.
I ask you escapist which one is it and why ?
1 in 7 billion. Probability works as the desired outcome over the possible outcomes. Your best friend being killed is one possible outcome but there are 7 billion possible outcomes. Everyone has an equal chance to die so it's 1 in 7 billion.UNKNOWNINCOGNITO said:Okay I've been trying to wrap my head around this and cannot make exact logical sense in it. If I were to push a button and the result of doing so shall randomly kill a person in the world what are the chances of it being my best friend ?
My argument is that it would 50/50 of it being my friend since the process is random and no one is favoured in anyway so it is either it is him or it is not him.
2 friends of mine instead say that the chances are 1 to 7 billion (assuming there are still 7 billion people on earth) that someone I know shall get axed from the random process.
I ask you escapist which one is it and why ?
Whilst I wouldn't phrase it that way, there is some truth behind this ...alexhj said:DON'T PRESS THE DAMN BUTTON YOU IDIOT!!!!!!
Only the 1/7 billion probability is correct. 50/50 would assume that each outcome is ENTIRELY INDISTINGUISHABLE (which is only possible if there are a max of 2 people)-- if there are 7 billion people other than the friend that could die, then an outcome where the friend lives and person 1 dies is NOT equivalent to the friend living and person 2 dying, etc.Weslebear said:The 2 given probabilities are BOTH correct but for DIFFERENT events.
The chance of your friend SPECIFICALLY dying is 50/50, there is two possibilities. Dead or alive.
HOWEVER the chance of him being chosen to die out of everyone is 1 to 7 billion because he is 1 out of 7 billion.
Just because it's random does not make it 50/50 for him being chosen, infact it specifically makes it fair for all, because it's random anyone has an equal chance so it's 1 out of 7 billion.
You don't know what a syntax error is do you ...cahtush said:So you say that the chance of randomly picking one out of 7*10^9 =50%?
I have only one thing to say. Syntax Error.
You detest philosophy? Interesting philosophy.SirBryghtside said:Read my above post. Different perspectives don't matter.Indeterminacy said:It's more complex than is generally acknowledged. Dependence is a philosophically difficult notion. We generally assume that "Whenever A, then not B" type examples are good enough to make the general point, but this rests on (admittedly useful) classical assumptions about the logical division of states when people are more combinatorial and intuitionist than that.SirBryghtside said:No. Just... no. I shouldn't even have to explain this. No one should.
In other words, cut the guy some slack.
Also, I don't believe there's such a thing as being too logical. I detest philosophy.
Except no. We aren't talking that. We're talking whether or not (I seriously can't believe people even had to explain this) his friend dies when he presses the button. The button kills one of the 7 billion people on the planet at random. From his point of view, yes- either his friend lives or dies. But we're talking about the actual odds that he dies if the button is pressed.4173 said:There's either a riot or there's not. 50/50Marter said:Man, I remember when Corner Gas did a gag on this.
Anyway, it's 1/7,000,000,000, as the number of possibilities doesn't equate to the probability that one of them is chosen.
Clearly you haven't read SpidermanGeneral_Tragg said:These deals with the devil are never weighted in your favour...