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KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote: Since the dice are unpredictable, you will NEVER know the "chances" beforehand, under any circumstances, and neither will anyone else. ...and guess what? The dice designers WANTED IT THAT WAY.
You've already lost all credibility in this thread KLOBBER. Based on that statement, you don't even know what the chances are to roll a 6 on a single throw. How could you possibly engage in any discussion where we talk about MULTIPLE dice throws?
Either learn the basics of calculating odds, or stop trolling this thread.
Since the dice are designed to be unpredictable, and they are just that, they are perfect as they are.
Nobody knows beforehand what the chances are, since the dice are unpredictable, just as they are designed to be, and you have proven nothing but the fact that they are unpredictable. Thank you for your help; you've done a better job of this than any other dice complainer I've seen.
KLOBBER wrote:Odds bodkins!
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Since you have volunteered the fact that you somehow don't know the definition of the term "odds," you are free to look it up on any of numerous online dictionaries. If you were looking for the truth, I would give it to you.
However, by asking your opponent instead of just looking it up directly, you betray the fact that what you're really looking for is an argument, not the truth.
Your failure: Stupid questions don't warrant answers.
xelabale wrote:KLOBBER wrote:Odds bodkins!
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Since you have volunteered the fact that you somehow don't know the definition of the term "odds," you are free to look it up on any of numerous online dictionaries. If you were looking for the truth, I would give it to you.
However, by asking your opponent instead of just looking it up directly, you betray the fact that what you're really looking for is an argument, not the truth.
Your failure: Stupid questions don't warrant answers.
The odds remain the same Klobber, regardless of the outcome. Ad hominem attacks do little to advance your argument. If I roll a die and it shows a 6 does that mean the odds of a 6 were 100%? This is your argument. I believe you may have the wrong idea about the meaning of "odds". Seeing as you didn't answer, and that is your tactic to avoid admitting defeat, I assume you are in fact admitting defeat.
As I've said to you before, just because you are not using bad language doesn't stop you from being a flamer and a troll. But then you knew that already....
maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote: Since the dice are unpredictable, you will NEVER know the "chances" beforehand, under any circumstances, and neither will anyone else. ...and guess what? The dice designers WANTED IT THAT WAY.
You've already lost all credibility in this thread KLOBBER. Based on that statement, you don't even know what the chances are to roll a 6 on a single throw. How could you possibly engage in any discussion where we talk about MULTIPLE dice throws?
Either learn the basics of calculating odds, or stop trolling this thread.
Since the dice are designed to be unpredictable, and they are just that, they are perfect as they are.
Nobody knows beforehand what the chances are, since the dice are unpredictable, just as they are designed to be, and you have proven nothing but the fact that they are unpredictable. Thank you for your help; you've done a better job of this than any other dice complainer I've seen.
Your whole argument is based around the fact that the dice are designed to be unpredictable? Where are you getting this? From every source I have looked at, including lack's direct words, the goal is to have RANDOM dice. Why else would he get them from RANDOM.org?
kiddicus maximus wrote:Klobber, quit employing circular reasoning to aggravate the statisticians. Your explanation isn't even valid. Of course there are odds when rolling dice. I believe they made a few games based around this fact...
read!
KLOBBER wrote:kiddicus maximus wrote:Klobber, quit employing circular reasoning to aggravate the statisticians. Your explanation isn't even valid. Of course there are odds when rolling dice. I believe they made a few games based around this fact...
read!
My reasoning is not circular, it is direct and clear. Theirs is circular and nonsensical.
In addition, their premise is that the CC dice are somehow predictable, which is a flawed premise.
Actually, the CC dice are unpredictable.
KLOBBER wrote:Actually, you're both wrong.
If such a scenario ever happened, of which there is no proof, then the odds of it happening were 100%.
If it didn't happen, which is more likely, then the odds were 0%.
xelabale wrote:OK Klobber - define odds for us. If you don't do it I will assume you acknowledge that you are wrong by your silence, as you usually don't answer awkward questions...
KLOBBER wrote:As I just said, stupid questions don't warrant answers.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
KLOBBER wrote:In that case, either the statistics course is also wrong, or your interpretation of it is wrong, or both. I have cited clear and irrefutable facts about the dice, and any attempted refutation of the unadorned facts must necessarily be incorrect.
By your "reasoning," if I flip a coin and it lands on heads, then, due to so-called "statistics," it must necessarily land on tails the second time, in order to line up with the unscientific and incorrect theory that it must match 50-50. However, real coins and real dice do not work that way, and neither do the dice on this site.
Paddy The Cat wrote:KLOBBER wrote:In that case, either the statistics course is also wrong, or your interpretation of it is wrong, or both. I have cited clear and irrefutable facts about the dice, and any attempted refutation of the unadorned facts must necessarily be incorrect.
By your "reasoning," if I flip a coin and it lands on heads, then, due to so-called "statistics," it must necessarily land on tails the second time, in order to line up with the unscientific and incorrect theory that it must match 50-50. However, real coins and real dice do not work that way, and neither do the dice on this site.
im not gonna read the rest of this thread, and im no stat major, but i did take a high school probability and statistics course, which i damn near failed, but i dont recall statistics ever saying anything must ever necessarily do anything.
in fact, that was kind of the point, there was always error accounted for and statistics stated anything is possible... yet at the same time it tried to show what is not probable 50-50, in the case of a coin flip, is just stating that for one individual flip there is a 50% chance of either tails or heads coming up.
nothing really for me to contribute, without reading the other 5 pages I'm gonna assume that klobber already got chewed up for having no idea what he's talking about, but i just couldnt not say something about the word 'necessarily' used in there...
john9blue wrote:KLOBBER wrote:As I just said, stupid questions don't warrant answers.
LOL.
How obvious is it that you're copping out?
At least you know you're wrong.
xelabale wrote:KLOBBER says there are no odds, it's entirely unpredictable.
I roll the die. It shows 3. What were the odds of rolling a 1?
xelabale says 1/6
KLOBBER says 0%
OR
I roll the die. It shows a 1. What were the odds of rolling a 1?
xelabale says 1/6
KLOBBER says 100%
Sperpurber wrote:KLOBBER wrote:kiddicus maximus wrote:Klobber, quit employing circular reasoning to aggravate the statisticians. Your explanation isn't even valid. Of course there are odds when rolling dice. I believe they made a few games based around this fact...
read!
My reasoning is not circular, it is direct and clear. Theirs is circular and nonsensical.
In addition, their premise is that the CC dice are somehow predictable, which is a flawed premise.
Actually, the CC dice are unpredictable.
Predictions are based on probability, which is inherent in any random number generators with a cap (eg: 1-6 as opposed to 1-ā).
KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote: Since the dice are unpredictable, you will NEVER know the "chances" beforehand, under any circumstances, and neither will anyone else. ...and guess what? The dice designers WANTED IT THAT WAY.
You've already lost all credibility in this thread KLOBBER. Based on that statement, you don't even know what the chances are to roll a 6 on a single throw. How could you possibly engage in any discussion where we talk about MULTIPLE dice throws?
Either learn the basics of calculating odds, or stop trolling this thread.
Since the dice are designed to be unpredictable, and they are just that, they are perfect as they are.
Nobody knows beforehand what the chances are, since the dice are unpredictable, just as they are designed to be, and you have proven nothing but the fact that they are unpredictable. Thank you for your help; you've done a better job of this than any other dice complainer I've seen.
Your whole argument is based around the fact that the dice are designed to be unpredictable? Where are you getting this? From every source I have looked at, including lack's direct words, the goal is to have RANDOM dice. Why else would he get them from RANDOM.org?
I already addressed that issue. Scroll up.
KLOBBER wrote:Actually, you're both wrong.
If such a scenario ever happened, of which there is no proof, then the odds of it happening were 100%.
If it didn't happen, which is more likely, then the odds were 0%.
AndrewB wrote:KLOBBER wrote:Actually, you're both wrong.
If such a scenario ever happened, of which there is no proof, then the odds of it happening were 100%.
If it didn't happen, which is more likely, then the odds were 0%.
LOL, it is exactly same as that joke about the blond woman:
"What are the chances that the dinosaurs existed?"
"50-50", blond reply.
"How did you figure?"
"Duh, they either existed or not..."
maniacmath17 wrote:AndrewB wrote:KLOBBER wrote:Actually, you're both wrong.
If such a scenario ever happened, of which there is no proof, then the odds of it happening were 100%.
If it didn't happen, which is more likely, then the odds were 0%.
LOL, it is exactly same as that joke about the blond woman:
"What are the chances that the dinosaurs existed?"
"50-50", blond reply.
"How did you figure?"
"Duh, they either existed or not..."
Haha. Yeah, that's a pretty good summary of KLOBBER's grasp of probability.
KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote:maniacmath17 wrote:KLOBBER wrote: Since the dice are unpredictable, you will NEVER know the "chances" beforehand, under any circumstances, and neither will anyone else. ...and guess what? The dice designers WANTED IT THAT WAY.
Since the dice are designed to be unpredictable, and they are just that, they are perfect as they are.
Nobody knows beforehand what the chances are, since the dice are unpredictable, just as they are designed to be, and you have proven nothing but the fact that they are unpredictable. Thank you for your help; you've done a better job of this than any other dice complainer I've seen.
Your whole argument is based around the fact that the dice are designed to be unpredictable? Where are you getting this? From every source I have looked at, including lack's direct words, the goal is to have RANDOM dice. Why else would he get them from RANDOM.org?
I already addressed that issue. Scroll up.
Lol. You never addressed the issue. At no point do you give any verification of the claim that the dice are designed to be unpredictable. And since that's the basis for your whole argument, I think you should definitely give some sort of proof for this outrageous claim. Either show where the designers said the dice are designed to be unpredictable, or stop talking.
kiddicus maximus wrote:In an effort to end this entire tirade:
The dice are completely unpredictable. You have no chance of predicting whether you're going to roll a 1 or a 6. However, statistically, you have a 16.6% chance of guessing correctly when attempting to predict the dice. There is no pattern, no cycle, nothing. The dice are essentially Pi (3.1415926535...) - never repeating.
The statistical anomalies that occur are living proof of this. 4 can beat 100. 100,000 can lose to 2. The chances are slim, but it is a probability. This probability cannot be predicted.
All good?
KLOBBER wrote:
I already addressed that issue in this thread. You either failed to read it or you failed to comprehend it.
Do you think that they designed the dice to be predictable? You really do seem to think that.
If you do, then you have something seriously wrong with your brain.
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