So what was the hint?Um, no. That's not the hint, and that's not an ad hominem.
So what was the hint?Um, no. That's not the hint, and that's not an ad hominem.
"Document" is too strong a word because no one here has produced any evidence that would stand up in a court of law about their knowledge of statistics. For the record, I have taken undergraduate courses in statistics and mathematical economics and a graduate level course in statistics, and have done a fair amount of statistical and probability analysis since that time.
I couldn't agree more with the latter statement. However, your first statement is incorrect. What I actually stated (in Post # 704) was: "When you toss a coin 1000 times, you are guaranteed to have an outcome and, while the odds against any one permutation is vanishingly small, the odds of some combinations occurring are much higher than others. For example, the odds of the combination 500 heads and 500 tails occurring is about 1 in 40. On the other hand, the odds of the combination 1000 heads and 0 tails occurring is about 1 in 10^301. So, you should not be astonished if you get the former combination, but you should be if you get the latter combination."For example, your claim that all heads is less likely than any other specific outcome is not true. It doesn't matter how many courses on statistics you've had.
And the combinations are irrelevant to the discussion of these "synchronicity" events, just the individual outcomes. I've explained this to you over and over.I couldn't agree more with the latter statement. However, your first statement is incorrect. What I actually stated (in Post # 704) was: "When you toss a coin 1000 times, you are guaranteed to have an outcome and, while the odds against any one permutation is vanishingly small, the odds of some combinations occurring are much higher than others. For example, the odds of the combination 500 heads and 500 tails occurring is about 1 in 40. On the other hand, the odds of the combination 1000 heads and 0 tails occurring is about 1 in 10^301. So, you should not be astonished if you get the former combination, but you should be if you get the latter combination."
Not really. That's why I put those terms in quotes.
Again, in Quarky's example about a fly coming along as a guy is sitting in a chair considering whether to mow the lawn or continue taking it easy. It is a meaningless random event. If the guy thinks that the fly was sent to motivate him to mow the lawn, it is not merely a personal and subjective feeling. It's a purported explanation. It's a hypothesis about the external world.
Just saying it's his own "meaning" doesn't change the fact that he's making an hypothesis about the external world. (And that hypothesis is wrong.)
I agree, but I don't think you can then just take the term he made up and claim that it refers to something else--especially since, as I've shown, the definition Jung gave it is the one Rodney and a great many people are using.
Again, language works by convention. You're free to think up different ways of naming things, but then you're just going to cause confusion.
How does a line get drawn?
Again, when you toss a coin 1000 times, you are guaranteed to have an outcome and, while the odds against any one permutation is vanishingly small, the odds of some combinations occurring are much higher than others.
For example, the odds of the combination 500 heads and 500 tails occurring is about 1 in 40.
Same anger.
Again, in the real world (i.e., outside this Forum), no prediction is necessary.
When you state -- "So synchronicity only happens in poorly-defined and poorly-controlled circumstances to people who don't understand statistics. There's a hint in there, if you would care but to look for it." -- the "hint" is rather obviously that I don't understand statistics.
Actually, he's technically correct here. In a combination, order doesn't matter; in a permutation, it does.No.
Nice cheat, here. You're combining several different combinations into a single one. HHHTTT is not the same as HTHTHT, even if the number of heads and tails is the same.
Actually, he's technically correct here. In a combination, order doesn't matter; in a permutation, it does.
That's not necessarily true. For example, someone might see a pattern in the stock market that seems to be repeating a prior pattern from many years earlier and possibly use that successfully as a predictive tool.My question is what then? Since synchrosity, even for those who look for it can only ever be established in retrospect. If it exists, it has no predictive value, and can only ever be investigated after the event, since nobody can ever know in advance, including buying a teapot, where any event is headed.
I disagree. While it may not have changed his life in the sense that he henceforth will drink more tea, his attitude towards life seems to have changed rather dramatically. For example, I suspect that without his teapots experience, his attitude toward his recently-diagnosed multiple sclerosis would be much different. (He can weigh in here if I've misread the situation.)And even after, as Two Teapots said, it has not exactly changed his life.
I think it varies from person to person. In some cases, such as Teapots Happen, it may be a completely different attitude; in other cases, such as a person who happens to run into his/her future spouse in an unlikely manner, it may be a significantly different lifestyle.And that is true of anything that anybody does. As far as I can see, it is a pretty useless "science", so I would also like to know that outside of establisihing odds, well to repeat, what next?
Actually, he's technically correct here. In a combination, order doesn't matter; in a permutation, it does.
I'm pleased that we've found a point of agreement.Actually, he's technically correct here. In a combination, order doesn't matter; in a permutation, it does.
No, I was simply making the point that a combination of 500 heads and 500 tails shouldn't astonish us, whereas a combination of 1000 heads and no tails should.Technically yes. But it's still a cheat because he's trying to have the to be equivalent.