Well, I appreciate some sort of affirmation anyway. Thanks.Iacchus, I am willing to cede that on a certain (non-quantum) level, there is no such thing as randomness. I see where you're coming from on this. (Yes, I speak gibberish.)
Yet if the casino didn't base everything upon the odds that they would win more they would lose, they wouldn't be in business now would they? So, how would you go about calling that random?When a gambler throws a pair of dice down a craps table, the result is not entirely random. The size and weight of the dice, the shapes of the corners, the position of the dice before the throw, the force, spin, and momentum of the throw, even temperature and windspeed will affect the outcome. These are all non-random factors. If one wanted to do all of the math involved with the physics, one could indeed calculate exactly what the result of the throw would be. However, such math is beyond the realm of most mortal gamblers. For the purposes of the casino, the results are truly random.
I couldn't agree more. Indeed, we have the appearance of randomness but, what I'm asking is that we don't call something what it isn't.In much the same way that for the purposes of evolution, genetic mutations are random. Even though the causes of such mutations are based in a very real physics, those causes have little to do in the expression of whether the host organism gains any ability to catch a tastier rabbit, thus survive longer, thus birth a healthier litter. The granularity of evolution is not sufficiently granular enough to care. For all intents and purposes, it's all random.
Same with the dice. The gambler doesn't care about about microscopic imperfections of the dice. Such things will not make enough of a difference in the way the house sets its odds. Nor does it -- and this is the important thing -- imply that such imperfections are evidence of long term advanced planning by a superior intelligence has cosmically determined that Joe Schmendirck from Reno will hit a hard eight.
Things can unfold without advance planning. Anyone who's worked on a long term office project can attest to this.