| ??? 12/23/07 07:18 Read: times |
#148631 - Are you even reading what I wrote? Responding to: ???'s previous message |
It entirely depends on how the preparation of numbers took place. If that's true, then randomness is a myth. I seem to recall, if my memory of history serves, that when the concept of zero was introduced to the western world, i.e. Europe, that too confused them. Explain this to me then, from your other recent post. If the Heisenberg principle precludes the possibiliy of knowing both position and momentum, how can you know that two weather systems are identicle? And if you can't, what possible insight can your hyperbole about identical systems subject to identical forces producing different results bring? How, for that matter, do you imagine such an outcome is even possible? Please explain this. Is it by mixing determinism and randomness? Okay. Then you tell me. What is randomness? Please, define it. |



