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Since you have not explained what your symbols mean, nobody can possibly contest your mathematics. P(r) = z.dqCan you challenge that?
added -start with any premise for argument against this P(B | A)=1probability of event B given event A occurred
We know there is one in 52 we do not know how many are in y. I suggest it is you guys who do not truly understand what random is.
Quote from: Thebox on 21/08/2015 18:51:12added -start with any premise for argument against this P(B | A)=1probability of event B given event A occurred In plain language, you are saying that B will inevitably happen if A has happened. I cannot think of anything you can do with shuffled cards for which this is true, other than "if A you take away the ace of spades, then B there is no ace of spades left in the pack". This sort of blindingly obvious but utterly useless statement might amuse philosophers but doesn't have much bearing on the game of poker.
Quote from: TheboxDo you actually understand what random is?Why do you keep asking this when its apparent to us that its only you who don't appear to have a firm grasp of it? Alan is a well educated man and knows darn well what random means as do everyone else. You've had a lot of time to learn math and you've never chosen to pick up a good book on math and start learning it from scratch. It's a terrible decision to attempt learning math by first learning about probability and statistics. Your use of the symbols here is so distorted that its next to impossible to follow. Your choice of not choosing to read those texts on math and physics that I suggested that you read is what made me choose not to converse with you anymore. I speak now only to remind you that you're not going to learn physics correctly the way that you're going.
Do you actually understand what random is?
what does "A is ^x" mean ?
Pete it is the present symbols science uses, it should not be that difficult to follow when I have provided the source links to the apparent meaningless symbols. It reads like a book to me.
scenario - Imagine a 3 lane motorway, you are in the most left lane, above each lane every 5m is a number 1,2, or 3 in no specific order.123231213231PP=youdrive down the motorway in the same lane. Got it now, imagine this scenario,
x ⊥ y means x has no factor greater than 1 in common with y.
x=52y=^xQuote from: alancalverd on 24/08/2015 23:00:12what does "A is ^x" mean ?Where does it say that?But in answer any specific variant to the power of x, xx^1x^2x^3
Please read what I post more carefully. I said that Your use of the symbols here is so distorted that its next to impossible to follow. That means that its not the symbols that's the problem but your use of them that's the problem. By the way, your constant statement that you're "correct" is also the problem because it shows that you're not willing to consider the notion that you might have made a mistake somewhere and when people can't conceive of making a mistake they rarely listen to the people who are telling them what the mistake is, i.e. they're not paying close enough attention and not keeping an open mind. It's been pointed out to you many times that your posts are confusing. The best example I can give to illustrate my point is the first post in this thread. All you did was to write down symbols without defining how they're being used and what they mean. We know what the symbols mean but its the context that's missing. You don't even use the symbols correctly. E.g. you wrote in part(dx)=52P(n)/(dx)=(1/52)/tAnd you didn't state what "(dx)" means. All you did was to assign it a value. Then you have the expression P(n) without defining what "n" is. We know from what the meaning of the symbol is but you're not using it in that context. All you have below is "~(n)" but you didn't specify it's value.The proper use of the symbol P(A) is that A is an event and therefore P(A) is the probability of that event. An example of an event is "The dealer deals an Ace out of a full deck of cards which are randomly shuffled." Then P(A) = 1/52.I could go on and on about your poor use and grasp of it but from what I've seen in this thread you won't understand it because you think you're right and therefore aren't willing to consider being wrong and learning what your mistake is.
So according to this y=x^1, x^2, x^3, etcSo which is it to be, and how did you decide that y is limited to these values anyway?This is why I describe your maths as gibberish, you can't just string together symbols you don't understand the meaning of.
P=chancex=52y=^x
A=specific variantσ²=variance of population values i.e A²/=in
OK, let's take it a bit at a timeQuote from: Thebox on 24/08/2015 22:09:46P=chancex=52y=^xWhat does y = ^x mean?Quote A=specific variantσ²=variance of population values i.e A²/=inPlease explain the meaning of your symbols. Is A a number? If so, what does it denote? If not, what does A2 mean? Population of what? Variance is a description of the distribution of a population along an axis - what axis? What does "/=in" mean to you?
P(A)=σ² using a Y axis
y is infinite Colin not limited, the above was just an example. It is actually x^∞=y
what does ^x mean? You have used ^ to indicate "to the power of", which is fairly conventional, but ^x^x^x presumably means something else to you, as do words like "variant", "event", and indeed almost everything you have written.Mathematics is a universal, formal language. If you were writing in French or German, I'm sure you would use words according to their meaning in France and Germany, so why not use mathematical definitions and symbols the same way as everyone else on the planet?
A probability cannot equal a measure of variance or deviation.