cyborg
deus ex machina
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2005
- Messages
- 4,981
That's a Red Herring.
It doesn't matter. The billard balls can only respond to the unfolding situation. That doesn't make their response random. I fail to see why you can't make this distinction.
The response to an event is determined. The occurrence of the event is not. However as the response is determined under indentical sets of events indentical sets of responses occur. It's not hard to understand.
Replace a dice with a list of numbers. Take all your quantum events that affect all your snooker balls and make them the same time after time. Does the same thing happen? Yes.
What is so hard to ****ing understand?
It doesn't matter. The billard balls can only respond to the unfolding situation. That doesn't make their response random. I fail to see why you can't make this distinction.
The response to an event is determined. The occurrence of the event is not. However as the response is determined under indentical sets of events indentical sets of responses occur. It's not hard to understand.
Replace a dice with a list of numbers. Take all your quantum events that affect all your snooker balls and make them the same time after time. Does the same thing happen? Yes.
What is so hard to ****ing understand?
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