Pup
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2004
- Messages
- 6,679
This may be one of those questions that has no answer, because it's worded wrong. But it occurred to me...
I understand the concept of probability, from a basic layman's perspective at least. You flip a coin randomly enough times, the occurrence of heads and tails will gradually trend toward being equal, though there may be lots of excess heads or tails at any point along the way. And there are plenty of detailed calculations to figure the probability of any number of results after any number of flips.
My question is not about the calculations, but about the force that is acting on the coin to make the predicted results happen.
Again, from a layman's perspective, I could explain to someone that the laws of motion make the coin flip and twist in the air based on the initial push upward, gravity, air resistance, etc., and I'm sure someone with more knowledge than me could compute and explain those forces in far more detail. But what actually controls the motion of the coin in such a way that the landings "organize themselves," after enough trials, into about half heads, half tails?
I know what affects the motion of the coin to prevent it from floating up to the ceiling for example, but what affects the motion of the coin to prevent it from landing heads up every time for one billion tosses in a row?
I hope I've worded that clearly enough. I'm not even sure how to google on the subject, without getting nothing but hits on how to calculate probability.
And of course, whatever affects the motion of coins in the air affects far more complex things as well, up to and including human behavior. But I'm not even gonna go there yet.
I understand the concept of probability, from a basic layman's perspective at least. You flip a coin randomly enough times, the occurrence of heads and tails will gradually trend toward being equal, though there may be lots of excess heads or tails at any point along the way. And there are plenty of detailed calculations to figure the probability of any number of results after any number of flips.
My question is not about the calculations, but about the force that is acting on the coin to make the predicted results happen.
Again, from a layman's perspective, I could explain to someone that the laws of motion make the coin flip and twist in the air based on the initial push upward, gravity, air resistance, etc., and I'm sure someone with more knowledge than me could compute and explain those forces in far more detail. But what actually controls the motion of the coin in such a way that the landings "organize themselves," after enough trials, into about half heads, half tails?
I know what affects the motion of the coin to prevent it from floating up to the ceiling for example, but what affects the motion of the coin to prevent it from landing heads up every time for one billion tosses in a row?
I hope I've worded that clearly enough. I'm not even sure how to google on the subject, without getting nothing but hits on how to calculate probability.
And of course, whatever affects the motion of coins in the air affects far more complex things as well, up to and including human behavior. But I'm not even gonna go there yet.