sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
If we had a different question, maybe it would be easier to see why the sequence is less important.
It's not less important in any intrinsic or fundamental sense, and I think that's part of what's bothering the OP. Take the example I gave above - suppose you flipped 500 heads in a row and then 500 tails in a row. If you only use the mean, that looks just as probable as any other sequence with the same totals (i.e. quite probable). But no reasonable person would conclude it was random.
What's really going on is that we have certain ideas about what types of patterns are likely, or even possible, in a series of coin flips. Most of those possibilities affect the mean but not the sequence. Therefore we mainly consider theories in which the probability of the data depends only on the mean. Mathematically speaking, that's perfectly fine - we can pick any theory we want and use Bayes to evaluate its probability. But which theories we choose to consider is totally up to us, and there is no mathematical framework to guide us or tell us that the mean is in any way special - that requires some intuition about coins.