psionl0
Skeptical about skeptics
You keep repeating this lie. What part of the word "IF" don't you understand?Yours is a false assertion that there is nothing other than pseudo-randomness and that there is no randomness at all.
You keep repeating this lie. What part of the word "IF" don't you understand?Yours is a false assertion that there is nothing other than pseudo-randomness and that there is no randomness at all.
You keep repeating this lie. What part of the word "IF" don't you understand?
...Are you denying that randomness has been proven true?
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Of course. It is just assumed in the absence of other information.
Define mutation!!
Define pseudo-random!!!
Define random!!!
I note that you did not argue your case that I am a closet theist because theists have used the same argument, but chose to be offended instead.I was going to detail all the fallacies in your post by responding to each part of it... but instead I am going to paraphrase it and the previous one ... in order for you to... perhaps ... hopefully... see the failures in logic in the statements.
Define mutation!!
Define pseudo-random!!!
Define random!!!
Pseudo-random: A data point or sequence of datapoints created by an algorithm that produces a repeatable, chaotic train of data.
Random: A sequence that cannot be predicted or repeated by any known method.
It is only "Fallacious Argumentum ad Ignorantiam" because you have lied about what I actually posted.And if you cannot tell IF randomness is true.... then your assertion that it is only pseudo-randomness is an Fallacious Argumentum ad Ignorantiam.
In a case of a truly random process there would be no deterministic algorithm.
By pseudo-random I don't imply that there is literally some algorithm written by an intelligent designer, but it's deterministically computable.
We might just don't know the algorithm or there are hidden variables that are inaccessible to us.
But there is no way to verify if our universe is pseudo-random or truly random, so I guess it's more of a philosophical question than a scientific one.
That could get confusing fast.In which case we usually refer to it as true random.
That could get confusing fast.
"Random" generally means unpredictable or uncontrollable. This is generally because we don't know the mechanism that generates the random event. If there is no such mechanism then we would call it "true random" but otherwise it is pseudo-random.
I agree. The recent discussion here came because Leumas claimed that a random process (in this case radioactive decay) is proof that randomness exists. Since our definition of 'random' is that the mechanism is unknown that would be a circular claim, and thus invalid.
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The highlighted is contrary to normal use. "True random" is generally used when it is assumed there is no known mechanism. Such as in TRNG (True Random Number Generator).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_random_number_generator
For truly random numbers, the computer must use some external physical variable that is unpredictable, such as radioactive decay of isotopes or airwave static, rather than by an algorithm. At the quantum level, subatomic particles have completely random behavior, making them ideal variables of an unpredictable system. Most higher end microcontrollers have TRNG sources, which wolfSSL can use as a direct random source or as a seed for our PRNG. Intel RDRAND, a silicon-based TRNG, is supported by wolfSSL.
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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...
In computing, a hardware random number generator (HRNG) or true random number generator (TRNG) is a device that generates random numbers from a physical process, rather than by means of an algorithm. Such devices are often based on microscopic phenomena that generate low-level, statistically random "noise" signals, such as thermal noise, the photoelectric effect, involving a beam splitter, and other quantum phenomena. These stochastic processes are, in theory, completely unpredictable for as long as an equation governing such phenomena is unknown or uncomputable.
And that is the whole point of insisting that there isn't randomness and that the universe is deterministic... so as to leave a gap for the omniscient Jabberwocky to know where the vanishing Cheshire Cat went to.... even if we do not know where... the omniscient Jabberwocky assuredly cannot be befuddled by the mere "random" vanishings of a Cheshire cat... can he?
All one needs to see randomness that even an omniscient Jabberwocky cannot ascertain for certain... is go to a Halloween Store... and buy one of those luminescent costumes and see it glow in the dark.... or... make a good hot cup of tea and drip a smidgen of milk in it and watch that... or turn the FM or AM radio set onto a channel that has no station on it and listen to that white noise... or wait for a tornado or hurricane or lightning and watch those... or get a good Geiger counter and listen to that... or go to the nearest whitewater river and sit at the bank and watch the water flow there... or go sunbathing and see if skin cancer will be the result or not.... etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
Anyone who cannot see how this stuff is randomness that even an omniscient Jabberwocky cannot ascertain for certain.... is only refusing to see it.... that's all.
Now compare it to this...
In a case of a truly random process there would be no deterministic algorithm. By pseudo-random I don't imply that there is literally some algorithm written by an intelligent designer, but it's deterministically computable. We might just don't know the algorithm or there are hidden variables that are inaccessible to us.
But there is no way to verify if our universe is pseudo-random or truly random, so I guess it's more of a philosophical question than a scientific one.
In a case of a truly random process there would be no deterministic algorithm. By pseudo-random I don't imply that there is literally some algorithm written by an intelligent designer, but it's deterministically computable.
We might just don't know the algorithm or there are hidden variables that are inaccessible to us.
But there is no way to verify if our universe is pseudo-random or truly random, so I guess it's more of a philosophical question than a scientific one.
I think I made my position quite clear. Take it or leave it, I care not.
TRNG is used when the RNG isn't a PRNG ie not from a deterministic algorithm but from an external noise source. It is not the same as saying that the external noise source is "truly" random.The highlighted is contrary to normal use. "True random" is generally used when it is assumed there is no known mechanism. Such as in TRNG (True Random Number Generator).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_random_number_generator
Hans
TRNG is used when the RNG isn't a PRNG ie not from a deterministic algorithm but from an external noise source. It is not the same as saying that the external noise source is "truly" random.
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Are you emotionally attached to [no] randomness somehow?
Oh well, despite all your silly bravado, ....
You obviously haven't studied the fields of knowledge involved. You are just making stuff up.
You are quite simply and directly wrong about this....
...You clearly don't understand... QM in general.
I don't know how you think that these quotes criticizing you have anything to say about TRNGs but your thought processes are rather mysterious anyway.Nope...
TRNG is used when the RNG isn't a PRNG ie not from a deterministic algorithm but from an external noise source. It is not the same as saying that the external noise source is "truly" random.
See what I mean about confusing?We agree.
Hans
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Lack of knowledge (of a random event mechanism) is not the same as knowledge of lack.
... A random sequence of events, symbols or steps often has no order and does not follow an intelligible pattern or combination....
... A random sequence of events, symbols or steps often has no order and does not follow an intelligible pattern or combination....