I was attempting to explain Monte Carlo simulations to a guy who was telling me that "80% of all statistics are false" is not a joke. This because I said "statistically significant", to which he replied 'statistics is all wrong, anyway'...
However. He denied that computers are capable of randomness, on the basis that they are systematic and can only perform sequences of operations. Thereby if a computer was to generate an extremely large list of three digit numbers, there would be a discoverable sequence.
Now, I'm fairly confident that computers are more capable of randomness than humans. But are they perfectly random? How is this accomplished, on a basic level? Perhaps not on a basic level at all, I'm thinking.
However. He denied that computers are capable of randomness, on the basis that they are systematic and can only perform sequences of operations. Thereby if a computer was to generate an extremely large list of three digit numbers, there would be a discoverable sequence.
Now, I'm fairly confident that computers are more capable of randomness than humans. But are they perfectly random? How is this accomplished, on a basic level? Perhaps not on a basic level at all, I'm thinking.