Nope... spontaneous fission of a 14C atom is a random process... it would behoove you to read about it.
What you are talking about is the result of numerous atoms put together which then becomes like the system in this video... where while each ball is going to end up randomly in a slot along the bottom axis, the overall system follows a binomial distribution (bell curve) in the number of balls at each slot.
ETA: Here have a read of this...
Yes, yes, I know exactly what half-life functions are, and that was my point: Whereas the decay of the individual atom appears to be random,.... We can even use the mechanism to measure the age of stuff.
the entire process is entirely deterministic and predictable.
On the macro scale, we can know exactly how many atoms will decay in a given time.
By whom?
If we can't agree that the landing location of a falling object is deterministic, then I don't know what this conversation is.
Determinism is a philosophical view, where all events are determined completely by previously existing causes. Deterministic theories throughout the history of philosophy have developed from diverse and sometimes overlapping motives and considerations. The opposite of determinism is some kind of indeterminism (otherwise called nondeterminism) or randomness. Determinism is often contrasted with free will, although some philosophers claim that the two are compatible.
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Debates about determinism often concern the scope of determined systems; some maintain that the entire universe is a single determinate system, and others identifying more limited determinate systems (or multiverse). Historical debates involve many philosophical positions and varieties of determinism. They include debates concerning determinism and free will, technically denoted as compatibilistic (allowing the two to coexist) and incompatibilistic (denying their coexistence is a possibility)....
Nope... it is random... it does not just appear to be random... and it is not deterministic... it is on average and approximately determinable for a whole lot of atoms together... but each individual atom decays randomly.
And the age of stuff measured by the process is within a range not an exact age... because it is approximate and random.
Again... nope... it is not... that is what "approximate" and "on average" means... it means it is not exactly determinable and not "entirely predictable"....
Yet again... nope... we do not... that is what "approximate" and "on average" means... that we do not "know exactly"...
I think you may want to revise what these words mean... and read the quote cited in this post again...
- approximate
- average
- random
- deterministic
ETA: Here is a question to ponder over... if one knows the AVERAGE age of people in a POPULATION of people... can one "know exactly" how long an individual in that population is going to live?? Does the age of an individual just "appear to be random"?
That is what current quantum theory says. But the question is if a new theory on a lower level could be discovered that reintroduces determinism. This was Einstein’s hope, but he had no idea how that would look like.Nope... it is random... it does not just appear to be random... and it is not deterministic... it is on average and approximately determinable for a whole lot of atoms together... but each individual atom decays randomly.
That is what current quantum theory says. But the question is if a new theory on a lower level could be discovered that reintroduces determinism. This was Einstein’s hope, but he had no idea how that would look like.
Randomness can be seen as conflicting with the deterministic ideas of some religions, such as those where the universe is created by an omniscient deity who is aware of all past and future events. If the universe is regarded to have a purpose, then randomness can be seen as impossible. This is one of the rationales for religious opposition to evolution, which states that non-random selection is applied to the results of random genetic variation.
Hindu and Buddhist philosophies state that any event is the result of previous events, as is reflected in the concept of karma. As such, this conception is at odd with the idea of randomness, and any reconciliation between both of them would require an explanation.
In some religious contexts, procedures that are commonly perceived as randomizers are used for divination. Cleromancy uses the casting of bones or dice to reveal what is seen as the will of the gods.
Giving wrongness a name doesn't make it valid, no matter what Philosophy says about the matter.
If the only card in your deck is "Well this is a valid philosophical concept" when everything is a valid philosophical concept, you don't have a weak hand, you don't have a hand.
The average of a set follows different rules than the the individual.
You are missing the whole point:
No... randomness is proven every time a 14C atom in all living things' bodies decays... it is just that some want to deny the fact...
Actually not. Instead, it is a prime example of a function that obeys strict rules even if we are (currently) unable to predict when an individual atom will decay. However, if we step back the distance of a few half-lives and a few millimeters, the decay pattern becomes totally predictable.
The higher you go in the scale of events, the more deterministic it gets. So to ponder for you: Does the fact that things seem deterministic at some level clash with them being "random" or "free" at some smaller scale, That is the question.
No... randomness is proven every time a 14C atom in all living things' bodies decays... it is just that some want to deny the fact...

You might not know which 14C atom is going to decay next nor when it will happen but that doesn't make it a random process.Nope... spontaneous fission of a 14C atom is a random process...
You might not know which 14C atom is going to decay next nor when it will happen but that doesn't make it a random process.
Consider the sequence 8, 2, 0, 7, 9 . . . You would have no idea which number is going to come up next. So it must be a random process - magic even - right? Wrong! I happen to know the seed and the formula that generates the sequence and can tell you with 100% certainty which number is going to come up next.
BZZZZZT! Wrong! The algorithm is of my own making. It is not a very good algorithm but good enough prevent you from figuring out the next number in the sequence.Ah... you used your programming language's RNG...
I have no information on what causes an atom to decay at a particular moment and neither do you.Nevertheless....... do you think there is a programmer out there who set up an algorithm for the fission of 14C atoms as a pseudo RNG???
BZZZZZT! Wrong! The algorithm is of my own making. It is not a very good algorithm but good enough prevent you from figuring out the next number.
Now... in your program use the seed number as the Date.now() function or whatever is the equivalent in your language instead of just a number you set.
Now run the program and see how successful you are in EVER guessing what the sequence is going to be...
It will behoove you to go research what a TRNG is ... and note while you are doing that... WHY it is a TRNG as opposed to just a PRNG.
Do you know why there exists this kind of online service to provide developers with a TRNG in the first place???
I have no information on what causes an atom to decay at a particular moment and neither do you.
The difference is that I don't leap to the conclusion that there are magic forces acting in a totally (true) random manner that cause the fission.
The difference is that I don't leap to the conclusion that there are magic forces acting in a totally (true) random manner that cause the fission.
Of course not. I know both the seed and the algorithm.But it does not prevent you???
Yes. It is a total tangent and not related to anything.have you even bothered to read this part of the post you are responding to
I am not arguing that a programmer "programmed" the universe. That is just a strawman of your own construction.But you think it is just like your not very good algorithm that you programmed in your computer??? So who is the programmer then??
The argument is IF the universe is deterministic. It is not that the universe is absolutely deterministic.No... but instead... you just leap to the conclusion that it is deterministic just like your not very good algorithm of a PRNG in your computer... which you can predict despite me not being able to do so???
Of course not. I know both the seed and the algorithm.
Yes. It is a total tangent and not related to anything.
I am not arguing that a programmer "programmed" the universe. That is just a strawman of your own construction.
The argument is IF the universe is deterministic. It is not that the universe is absolutely deterministic.
Determinism is a philosophical view, where all events are determined completely by previously existing causes. Deterministic theories throughout the history of philosophy have developed from diverse and sometimes overlapping motives and considerations. The opposite of determinism is some kind of indeterminism (otherwise called nondeterminism) or randomness. Determinism is often contrasted with free will, although some philosophers claim that the two are compatible.
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For me, a necessary but not sufficient condition for free will is some degree of independence of the actions/decisions from any circumstances. However even the world might be indeterministic in the physical sense (for example of quantum indeterminism) people may still lack free will since they are controlled by physical processes.
.. And natural events don't do anything by "free will".